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Global Developments and Analysis: Weekly Monitor, 27 December 2021 – 02 January 2022

Economic
US: Telecom operators agree to 5G delay in U-turn decision

Two major US telecom operators, AT&T and Verizon, agreed on Jan 03 evening to a further two-week delay to a planned rollout of 5G networks across the country. The decision followed a request by Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on behalf of aviation companies that were worried about the interference of 5G signals on aircraft safety devices. The two companies had previously rejected the request after having already delayed their launch by a month. “We’ve agreed to a two-week delay which promises the certainty of bringing this nation our game-changing 5G network in January,” Verizon said in a statement after talks with government officials and the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA). Buttigieg and FAA chief Stephen Dickson wrote to Verizon and AT&T on Dec 31 asking them to hold off on their nationwide launch for a maximum of two weeks. The move was triggered by concerns of “unacceptable disruption” to flights due to possible interference from 5G signals. The C-band frequency used by 5G is close to that used by altimeter devices on planes that measure the aircraft’s altitude. Click here to read…

RCEP’s fruits come with challenge of keeping China in check

With the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership agreement taking effect Jan 01, Japan and other member nations expect to revitalize the pandemic-hit economy through free trade in the economic bloc, regarded as the world’s largest, covering about a third of the global economy. An outlook on its impact on Japan’s economy is particularly rosy, some analysis suggested. At the same time, however, Japan will face difficulties keeping China’s growing influence in the region in check, while its ally the United States remains at odds with China over human rights and other issues. “Japan would benefit the most from RCEP tariff concessions, largely because of trade diversion effects,” a recent report published by the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development pointed out. The 15-member RCEP was signed on Nov. 15, 2020, coming into force following ratification by at least six member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and three non-ASEAN economies. It incorporates Japan’s first economic partnership agreement with China and South Korea, the two main destinations of its exports in Asia. RCEP, seen as turning the region into “a new center of gravity for global trade,” is expected to ultimately eliminate tariffs on over 90 percent of goods traded within the bloc comprised of economies of various sizes and at different stages of development. Click here to read…

China and Russia team up to establish joint moon base

China and Russia plan to set up a joint moon base by 2027, eight years earlier than originally planned. The joint moon base, called the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS), will be a complex of experimental research facilities designed for multiple scientific activities, such as moon exploration, moon-based observation, research experiments and technology verification. Presently, China’s lunar presence includes the Chang’e 4 Lander and the Yutu 2 rover, whose arrival in 2019 marked humanity’s first landings on the dark side of the moon. China and Russia’s joint moon base plans can be seen as a response to their exclusion from the US Artemis Accords, which aims to establish principles, guidelines and best practices for space exploration for the US and its partners. China is barred from participating in joint projects with the US in space by the Wolf Amendment, a 2011 measure prohibiting NASA from cooperating with China without special approval from Congress.As a result, China is forced to be self-reliant in its space program. Illustrating this is the fact that China is barred from joining the International Space Station (ISS), but it is in the process of building its own Tiangong space station, which it plans to finish by the end of 2022. Click here to read…

China biggest borrower, lender among middle-income nations

China is the largest borrower among all the world’s low- and medium-income countries while also being one of the biggest lenders to those places, the World Bank said in a recent report, underscoring the nation’s key position in the global economy. Almost 60%, or about $4 trillion, of financial flows to low- and middle-income countries from external creditors and investors went to China over the last decade, according to the November report. In 2020, loans and investments that made their way into China jumped 32% from a year earlier to $466 billion, even as such flows to low- and medium-income countries generally slowed. The balance of China’s debts increased 11% to $2.3 trillion. The World Bank said the greater flows into China were mainly driven by increased investment in yuan-denominated bonds through the country’s interbank bond market, also known as CIBM, which has been relaxing restrictions on overseas investors since 2016. Foreign investors held $635 billion of Chinese bonds by the end of 2020. CIBM is now worth $12 trillion, second only to its U.S. counterpart. Meanwhile, low- and middle-income countries’ combined debt to China was $170 billion at the end of 2020, more than triple the level in 2011. Click here to read…

China’s Hainan sees duty-free sales boom as shoppers look for ‘convenient’ alternative to Hong Kong

Duty-free sales in China’s island province of Hainan surged to 50.49 billion yuan (US$7.9 billion) in 2021, growing 83 per cent from a year earlier, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to limit travel abroad and Hong Kong’s stringent quarantine controls make it difficult for mainlanders to visit the city. Hainan’s commerce department said the number of duty-free shoppers to the island increased by 73 per cent year on year, and the volume of duty-free purchases rose by 71 per cent over the same period. The island’s 10 duty-free stores – which also sell non-duty free items – booked sales of 60.173 billion yuan last year, up 84 per cent from 2020. China announced in June last year it would turn the 35,000 sq km island into the world’s largest free-trade port by offering tax incentives and relaxing visa requirements for tourists and business travellers. Starting in 2025, the entire island will be designated duty free, eliminating the need for brands to work with duty-free licensees. Beijing hopes the island’s transformation will boost domestic consumption – a key part of the new “dual circulation” economic strategy – by enticing Chinese to spend at home rather than in other duty-free hubs like Singapore. Click here to read…

Tesla Opens Showroom in China’s Xinjiang, Region at Center of U.S. Genocide Allegations

Tesla Inc. has opened a new showroom in Xinjiang, the remote region where Chinese authorities are carrying out a campaign of forcible assimilation against religious minorities that has become a public-relations quagmire for Western brands. The Austin, Texas-based electric car maker started operations at the new showroom in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, the company said in a Dec. 31 post on its official account on China’s popular Twitter-like social-media platform Weibo. “On the last day of 2021, we meet in Xinjiang. In 2022, let us together launch Xinjiang on its electric journey!” Tesla wrote in the post. Tesla’s China-based spokesperson couldn’t be reached for comment on a public holiday. Widely admired in China, Tesla has expanded rapidly in the world’s most populous country. With its most recent expansion, however, the auto maker risks wading into a reputational thicket that has recently ensnared other major American companies such as Walmart Inc. and Intel Corp.Xinjiang has quickly become a litmus test for foreign companies doing business in China. Those who embrace the region risk regulatory trouble and reputational blowback in their home markets, while those who shun it face the wrath of China’s government and increasingly nationalistic consumers. Click here to read…

Is Apple worth US$3 trillion? Bulls, bears examine the case

Is Apple really worth US$3 trillion 16 months after becoming the first company valued at US$2 trillion ?The answer depends on how one views the iPhone maker’s ability to keep up the unprecedented growth of the past 15 years. In its last fiscal year ended Sep 25, Apple delivered 33 per cent revenue growth to US$365.8 billion thanks to strong demand for 5G iPhone upgrades. But that growth spurt came after a year of single-digit sales growth and a fiscal 2019 when Apple’s sales declined. The bull case for Apple is that it has built an ecosystem of 1 billion iPhone owners who spend money on services and that it is well-positioned for future categories like self-driving cars and augmented reality. The deep discount investors once ascribed to Apple’s stock because of its dependence on the iPhone for sales growth has disappeared as Apple has proved that the device sits at the centre of an expanding solar system that adds new gadgets like the Apple Watch and Apple AirTags and new, paid services like television and fitness classes. Moreover, Apple is trading at about 30 times its expected 12-month earnings, down a bit from a multiple of 32 in early 2021 but still at highs not seen since 2008, according to Refinitiv data. Click here to read…

China buckles in its belt and road ambitions with Suez investments

About 120km (75 miles) east of Cairo near the Suez Canal lies one of the biggest concentrations of Chinese investments in Egypt – part of the Belt and Road Initiative, President Xi Jinping’s trade and infrastructure development plan. Most of the massive investments are concentrated in the Suez Canal Economic Zone, made up of six ports and four industrial estates, which has attracted many businesses making building materials, high-voltage equipment, machinery and petroleum equipment.Within the zone, China has built a 7.34 sq km (3 sq miles) industrial estate known as Teda City, short for the China-Egypt Teda Suez Economic and Trade Cooperation Zone. From their manufacturing hub at Teda, Chinese companies are tapping into the opportunities that come with the belt and road project, setting up industries to serve markets in the Middle East and Europe, through the Suez Canal. More than 10 per cent of global trade – 18,000 ships every year – goes through the Suez Canal and China is its biggest user. The waterway connects the Mediterranean to the Red Sea and is the shortest sea link between Asia and Europe, Beijing’s biggest market. Click here to read…

Indonesia bans coal exports in January on domestic supply worries: media

Indonesia has banned coal exports in January due to concerns that low supplies at domestic power plants could lead to widespread blackouts, a senior official at the energy ministry said on Jan 01. The Southeast Asian country is the world’s biggest exporter of thermal coal, exporting around 400 million tonnes in 2020. Its biggest customers are China, India, Japan and South Korea.Indonesia has a so-called Domestic Market Obligation (DMO) policy whereby coal miners must supply 25% of annual production to state utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) at a maximum price of $70 per tonne, well below current market prices. “Why is everyone banned from exporting? It’s beyond us and it’s temporary. If the ban isn’t enforced, almost 20 power plants with the power of 10,850 megawatts will be out,” Ridwan Jamaludin, director-general of minerals and coal at the energy ministry, said in a statement. “If strategic actions aren’t taken, there could be a widespread blackout.”In recent years, Indonesia has exported about 30 million tonnes of coal in the month of January. Ridwan said coal supplies to power plants each month were below the DMO, so by the end of the year “there was a coal stockpile deficit,” adding that the ban will be evaluated after Jan. 5. Click here to read…

Pakistan considers higher taxes to meet IMF demands

Pakistan’s government is facing a tough choice: prevent economic default or public outcry that could topple it from power.The government on Dec 30 submitted a bill to the National Assembly — a supplementary finance bill that will give Islamabad the right to impose indirect taxes of 360 billion Pakistani rupees ($2 billion). The government is reluctant to have to raise taxes but it needs to do so as a prerequisite to get approval for a $1 billion loan at a Jan. 12 board meeting of the International Monetary Fund. Islamabad was also expected to submit another bill under IMF pressure, called the State Bank of Pakistan amendment. The bill, if passed, will give the central bank more autonomy and allow it to reject government borrowing. The government has not given any hints as to whether this bill will be shelved or submitted later. There had been worries that the indirect taxes could lead to higher prices, which might trigger protests. This comes after the ruling party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf led by Prime Minister Imran Khan, recently suffered huge setbacks in local mayoral and district elections, as Pakistanis punished the party for inflation. Click here to read…

Kazakhstan’s crypto mining boom fizzles over power supply strain

A wild year for cryptocurrency mining in Kazakhstan is ending on a sour note, with electricity shortages putting what appeared to be a boom on the verge of going bust. A Chinese crackdown on the industry in May triggered an influx of miners into the normally energy-rich country, which appeared to welcome them with open arms. Quickly, however, Kazakhstan found its power supply taxed by the sudden spurt of mining, which sucks up huge amounts of electricity.Miners feel they have been unfairly maligned due to the shortcomings of an outdated, creaky and inefficient national grid. Some have already gone elsewhere. Those that remain — and the government — are groping for ways to make the industry more sustainable and keep the digital currency flowing. At the start of 2021, the Central Asian nation was a relatively minor player on the global crypto scene. But as China moved to wipe out the industry, Kazakhstan went from accounting for 6.17% of the world’s hash rate — a measure of processing power used to mine cryptocurrency — to 18.1% by August, according to the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance. Click here to read…

New EU Rules Spark Fight Over What Is ‘Green’ Energy

The European Union has proposed treating nuclear energy and natural-gas investments as similar to renewables over coming years in pursuit of a carbon-neutral economy, but the approach faces criticism from some of the bloc’s governments. The draft recommendation, which needs approval from EU governments and the European Parliament, underlines the political controversy already stirred up by environmental policies in Europe, despite broad public support for action to prevent climate change.The proposal from the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, spells out changes to what counts as investment in environmentally sustainable energy. Known as the “green taxonomy,” it is being closely watched by investors and industries including power generation, transportation and manufacturing.Europe needs massive investment to meet its 2050 target for a carbon-neutral economy. In 2019, the Commission estimated it would need between 175 billion euros to 250 billion euros—equivalent to $199.02 billion to $284.31 billion—in additional annual investment in coming decades to achieve the goal. Most of that will need to come from the private sector. The EU hopes that by clearly classifying what counts as green investment and setting out stricter rules for what is required to achieve that, it will encourage investment in green projects, potentially lowering their funding costs relative to other energy plans. Click here to read…

Japanese snack giant taps India-born exec to make rice crackers overseas hit

Piquant and super crunchy “kaki no tane” rice crackers have been a mainstay of Japanese supermarket snack aisles for decades, but the company that manufactures it is hoping to break out of the domestic market and make it a hit overseas too. And the firm is looking to its new India-born vice president and kaki no tane enthusiast Juneja Raj Lekh to lead the charge. Kaki no tane (literally “persimmon seeds,” for the savoury snack’s shape) is thought to have been invented by a snack-maker in Niigata Prefecture in 1924. Rice-based snack behemoth Kameda Seika Co. added peanuts to it in 1966 and marketed it as “kaki pea” and the product took off in the late 1980s. Lekh is originally an expert in microorganisms and fermentation. He came to Japan in 1984 and earned a PhD from Nagoya University. In 1989, he joined Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture-based food ingredient maker Taiyo Kagaku Co. as a researcher. There he isolated compounds in tea that help people relax or give them increased protection against cavities — compounds that are apparently still used in numerous products today.In recognition of his achievements, Taiyo Kagaku promoted Lekh to executive vice president in 2003. Seeking new challenges, Lekh moved to Rohto Pharmaceutical in 2014. Click here to read…

Strategic
2022 look ahead: Xi and Biden’s moment of truth

According to the Chinese zodiac, 2022 is the Year of the Tiger. Coming every 12 years, let us consider the Year of the Tiger over the last six calendar cycles: 2010: Greek government bonds were downgraded to junk status; 1998: The Long Term Credit Bank of Japan was nationalized; 1986: The Chernobyl disaster; 1974: The Watergate scandal forced the resignation of U.S. President Richard Nixon; 1962: The Cuban missile crisis brought the world to the brink of full-scale nuclear war; 1950: North Korea invaded South Korea to begin the Korean War.During each of the above Years of the Tiger, the Nikkei Stock Average — which measures the performance of 225 large, publicly owned Japanese companies — ended the year lower in all cases except 1986. One win from six is the worst performance among the twelve zodiacs. So, what can we expect from this current Year of the Tiger? Perhaps it is worth re-examining the geopolitical insights we gained in 1950 and 1962. 2022 will prove decisive and be remembered as the year of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s rise and U.S. President Joe Biden’s fall. As a result, the escalating competition between the two superpowers will be much harder and stronger, and we will see accelerated geopolitical risk in the Taiwan Strait. Click here to read…

‘P5’ nuclear powers including China, US pledge to keep such weapons only for defence

The United States, China and three other nuclear-armed countries collectively known as the “P5”, released on Jan 03 a joint statement pledging to use nuclear weapons only for defensive purposes, amid rising concern over Beijing’s more pronounced military posture.Along with Britain, France and Russia, Washington and Beijing affirmed that “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought”. The five countries are the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council. “As nuclear use would have far-reaching consequences, we also affirm that nuclear weapons – for as long as they continue to exist – should serve defensive purposes, deter aggression, and prevent war,” the group said. “We believe strongly that the further spread of such weapons must be prevented.” The statement follows a series of warnings by US defence officials in recent months that say China’s advances in military technology, including the size and scope of its nuclear missile arsenal, are becoming a serious challenge for America’s military. A report released by the Pentagon in November claimed that China had expanded its nuclear capacity on land, sea and air, estimating the country could have up to 700 deliverable nuclear warheads by 2027 and at least 1,000 by 2030. Click here to read…

Biden talks sanctions, Putin warns of rupture over Ukraine

President Joe Biden has warned Russia’s Vladimir Putin that the U.S. could impose new sanctions against Russia if it takes further military action against Ukraine, while Putin responded that such a U.S. move could lead to a complete rupture of ties between the nations. The two leaders spoke frankly for nearly an hour Dec 30 amid growing alarm over Russia’s troop buildup near Ukraine, a crisis that has deepened as the Kremlin has stiffened its insistence on border security guarantees and test-fired hypersonic missiles to underscore its demands. Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov, who briefed reporters in Moscow after the Biden-Putin phone conversation said that Putin told Biden that Russia would act as the U.S. would if offensive weapons were deployed near American borders. White House officials offered a far more muted post-call readout, suggesting the leaders agreed there are areas where the two sides can make meaningful progress but also differences that might be impossible to resolve. Putin requested the call, the second between the leaders this month, ahead of scheduled talks between senior U.S. and Russian officials Jan. 9 and 10 in Geneva. The Geneva talks will be followed by a meeting of the Russia-NATO Council on Jan. 12 and negotiations at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe in Vienna on Jan. 13. Click here to read…

Turkey’s Erdogan Says He Will Visit Saudi Arabia in February

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would visit Saudi Arabia next month as the rival Middle Eastern powers look to overcome years of tensions that peaked after the 2018 killing of a prominent Saudi journalist in Istanbul.“At the moment, he is expecting me in February,” Mr. Erdogan said in a video shared online on Jan 03. “He promised, and I will visit Saudi Arabia in February,” Mr. Erdogan said in apparent reference to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler. There was no immediate confirmation of Mr. Erdogan’s planned visit by Saudi Arabia. A once unimaginable encounter between the leaders of Turkey and Saudi Arabia would signal a detente in a rift that has divided the Middle East for years. The meeting offers a chance to put behind them problems that have poisoned the relationship between two of the region’s biggest economies, foremost among them the killing and dismemberment of writer Jamal Khashoggi by a team of Saudi government operatives inside the kingdom’s Istanbul consulate. Middle East diplomats say they are talking to rivals shunned for years amid uncertainty over the Biden administration’s commitment to the region following the U.S.’s abrupt withdrawal from Afghanistan last summer and its foreign-policy pivot toward China. Click here to read…

Attacks on U.S. Allies Raise Tensions on Anniversary of Killing of Iran’s Soleimani

Yemen’s Houthi rebels seized an Emirati-flagged ship, explosive-laden drones targeted the Iraqi capital’s airport and hackers hit two Israeli newspapers on Jan 03, raising tensions in the Middle East as Iran-aligned militias attacked U.S. allies on the second anniversary of America’s killing of one of Tehran’s top generals.Meanwhile, Iran held a massive memorial for Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani in the country’s capital to mark the anniversary of the American drone strike in Iraq that killed the military leader and an Iraqi militia commander on Jan. 3, 2020. It wasn’t immediately clear if Jan 03’s attacks were coordinated or backed by Iran. They came a day after Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei tweeted: “Martyr Soleimani is more dangerous for his enemies than General Soleimani.”They also followed protests by Iran-allied paramilitary groups in Iraq over the weekend. Crowds in Baghdad chanted “death to America” and vowed to avenge Gen. Soleimani’s killing. “Iran is trying to show that they are taking revenge and that they are strong,” said Hamdi Malik, an associate fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and an expert on Iraq’s Shiite militias. “But at the same time they don’t really want to start a war because they desperately need the sanctions to be lifted,” Mr. Malik said. Click here to read…

New US defence law calls for stronger Taiwan ties, but US President Joe Biden must walk a tightrope

Military exchanges between Taiwan and the United States are expected to increase in both level and scope this year with both Congress and the White house supporting the island in strengthening its defences in the face of growing threats from Beijing. But although the 2022 US National Defence Authorisation Act (NDAA) calls for Taiwan to be invited to this summer’s Rim of the Pacific exercises – the world’s largest international maritime military drill – the prospects for its participation are not as good as they might seem, observers said. The defence bill, which President Joe Biden signed into law on Dec 27, includes provisions to enhance Taiwan’s asymmetric capabilities and elements to promote military and security cooperation.The measure, which authorises US$770 billion for the US Defence Department, also recommends that before mid-February the Pentagon briefs congressional committees on the feasibility and advisability of enhanced cooperation between the National Guard and Taiwan. Chieh Chung, a senior researcher at the National Policy Research Foundation, a think tank for Taiwan’s main opposition party, the Kuomintang, said that “not only that the provisions about Taiwan in the NDAA are non-binding, but the Biden government also has to take into account the reaction of Beijing and its one-China policy”. Click here to read…

China says it has hypersonic missiles with heat-seeking tech – years before US

Chinese scientists say they have developed next-generation hypersonic weapons with technical breakthroughs in infrared homing technology – which the US military may not have until 2025. Heat-seeking capability allows Chinese hypersonic missiles to home in on almost any target – including stealth aircraft, aircraft carriers and moving vehicles on the street – with unprecedented accuracy and speed, according to the researchers. The first generation of hypersonic weapons were designed to penetrate missile defence systems and hit fixed targets on the ground at five times the speed of sound or faster. Although China and Russia had deployed some hypersonic missiles, a popular opinion elsewhere was that these weapons had little practical value unless a country wanted to start a nuclear war. But conventional warfare could be transformed by a hypersonic missile being able to search for, identify and lock on to a target based on its heat signature when flying at low altitudes where the air is thicker, said the Chinese researchers, from the hypersonic infrared homing programme at the National University of Defence Technology. Heat sensing at hypersonic speed is not easy, but China has made “a series of core technology breakthroughs that were proven effective in tests”, lead scientist Professor Yi Shihe wrote in a paper published on December 15 in domestic peer-reviewed journal Air and Space Defence. Click here to read…

Japan and China agree to launch defense hotline next year

Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said Dec 27 he agreed with his Chinese counterpart Wei Fenghe to start operating a hotline between their officials amid tensions over disputed islets in the East China Sea. Kishi also said at a press conference after holding a videoconference with Wei that peace and stability on the Taiwan Strait are vital for Japan’s security, and Tokyo will closely monitor developments there.”We confirmed that the early establishment of a hotline between Japanese and Chinese defense authorities is important,” Kishi said, adding he expressed “extreme grave concern” over Chinese coast guard ships’ activities in waters surrounding the Japanese-administered Senkaku Islands, which Beijing claims and calls Diaoyu. China and Japan should “jointly manage and control risks” while focusing on the overall situation of bilateral relations and striving to maintain stability in the East China Sea, Wei was quoted as saying by the ministry. During their first talks since December last year, which lasted for about two hours, Kishi said the hotline will enhance the efficiency of a communication mechanism that the two countries launched in 2018 to avoid accidental clashes at sea and in the air. Click here to read…

South China Sea: think tank calls for Beijing vigilance as US steps up surveillance of disputed waterway

The United States intensified its surveillance of China over the South China Sea in 2021, a Beijing-based think tank said while calling on Beijing to remain vigilant about any heightened risk over the waters. Hu Bo, director of the South China Sea Probing Initiative, said that in 2021 the US had conducted 1,200 surveillance missions using large-scale reconnaissance aircraft – up from 1,000 sorties last year – including several approaches 20 nautical miles from the baseline of territorial waters claimed by Beijing. The US sent aircraft carrier strike groups and amphibious groups to enter the South China Sea 13 times – double the number sent in 2020. At least 11 attack nuclear submarines sailed to the South China Sea and its surrounding waters last year, Hu said. “Relations between China and the US have become the biggest uncertainty in the security of the South China Sea. The two nations have the most dialogue platforms but also are facing the most serious confrontation,” Hu said. Hu made the remarks on Jan 01 in a forum addressing the South China Sea issue before the transcript was published on the think tank’s social media account on Jan 03. Click here to read…

China tells Indonesia to stop drilling off South China Sea islands

China has repeatedly told Indonesia to halt an oil and natural gas development project in the South China Sea, claiming infringement on its territorial waters, Nikkei has learned. The exploratory drilling began in July near the Natuna islands within Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone, which overlaps China’s expansive “nine-dash line” territorial claim covering much of the sea. In addition to the protests, China has sent coast guard vessels into the area to increase pressure, Indonesian government sources said, citing eyewitness accounts. Jakarta, which contends that no territorial dispute with China exists, has not disclosed Beijing’s protests. Indonesia apparently regards a public response to the protests as tantamount to acknowledging the existence of a dispute. The round of drilling was completed in late November, said Vice Adm. AanKurnia, who heads the Indonesian Maritime Security Agency, known as Bakamla. Beijing has intensified activity near the Natuna islands since 2019, escalating tensions with Jakarta. In May 2020, Indonesia sent the United Nations a letter rejecting Beijing’s historical claims in the sea indicated by its nine-dash line maps. China, in turn, sent a letter to the U.N. that maintains the claims in the South China Sea while seeking a solution through negotiations. Indonesia refused to come to the table. Click here to read…

Disillusioned younger voters hold key to South Korea presidential race

South Korea’s two main presidential candidates are running neck and neck just over two months before the election, spurring a scramble for young independent voters to tip the scales. This bloc swayed April’s mayoral elections in Seoul and Busan, delivering a clear rebuke to the ruling Democratic Party and President Moon Jae-in’s administration amid frustration with corruption scandals and policies that helped fuel a surge in property prices. The leading candidates in the presidential race — a retired civil rights attorney who rose from humble beginnings, Democrat Lee Jae-myung, and a former chief prosecutor known for not shrinking from a fight, Yoon Seok-youl of the opposition conservative People Power Party — are now vying for these voters. Polling shows overwhelmingly unfavourable ratings for both contenders in a race that has descended into mudslinging. A Gallup Korea poll found that 45% of respondents ages 18-29 had no party affiliation, along with 31% of those in their 30s, compared with no more than 15% for any older group — a trend reflecting young people’s disappointment with their political options. Millennial and Generation Z voters have experienced cutthroat competition, particularly for jobs, and are highly sensitive to South Korea’s inequality of opportunity. As voters, they tend to think pragmatically rather than tie themselves to a particular party. Click here to read…

South Korea’s Moon promises final push for North Korea peace

South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowed on Jan 3 to use his last months in office to press for a diplomatic breakthrough with North Korea, despite public silence from Pyongyang over his attempts for a declaration of peace between the two sides. “The government will pursue normalisation of inter-Korean relations and an irreversible path to peace until the end,” Moon said in his final New Year’s address before his five-year term ends in May. “I hope efforts for dialogue will continue in the next administration too.” In his own address on New Year’s Eve, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made no mention of Moon’s calls for a declaration officially ending the 1950 to 1953 Korean War, or of stalled denuclearisation talks with the United States. Moon held multiple summits with Kim, including once in Pyongyang, during a flurry of negotiations in 2018 and 2019, before talks stalled amid disagreements over international demands that the North surrender its arsenal of nuclear weapons, and Pyongyang’s call for Washington and Seoul to ease sanctions and drop other “hostile policies”. Moon is pushing an “end of war declaration” as a way to jumpstart those stalled negotiations and his administration has hinted at backchannel discussions. Click here to read…

2021, the year military coups returned to the stage in Africa

This year, there were four successful military takeovers across the continent – in Chad, Mali, Guinea and Sudan – up from one in 2020.In the second part of the 20th century, military coups in Africa were used as a common means of changing the political order in the wake of decolonisation. Between 1960 and 2000, the overall number of coups and coup attempts stood at an average of four per year, according to a study by Jonathan Powell, an associate professor at the University of Central Florida, and Clayton Thyne, a professor at the University of Kentucky. However, as calls for democratic reforms and constitutionalism grew with the new century, military coups decreased to two per year until 2019. Now, however, they seem to be making a comeback – prompting United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres earlier this year to decry what he dubbed “an epidemic of coup d’etats”. The recent surge in the militarisation of politics, analysts say, is influenced by a mix of external drivers, including the increasing and diverse number of international actors who are active in the continent prioritising their interests, and internal factors, such as widespread public frustration against corruption, insecurity and poor governance. Click here to read…

Libyan parliament urges elections commission to set new date for presidential election

Libya’s House of Representatives, the parliament, urged on Jan 03 the High National Elections Commission to propose a new date for the presidential election as soon as possible. The House of Representatives made the call in a statement after a parliament session, during which 80 of its members gathered to hear the briefing of the Commission’s head on the failure to hold the presidential election on schedule. “The High National Elections Commission should communicate with all departments and agencies involved in the electoral process in order to lift the state of force majeure and set a new date for the elections,” said the statement. According to Emad al-Sayeh, head of High National Elections Commission, “conflicting legal rulings that were not released on time, and threats made to the Commission against publishing the final list of presidential candidates containing certain names” were among the factors that prevented the presidential election from taking place on time. Presidential election in Libya was scheduled for Dec. 24, 2021. However, along with the parliamentary elections, it was postponed indefinitely over technical and legal issues, according to the Commission. The elections are part of a roadmap adopted by the UN-sponsored Libyan Political Dialogue Forum, which aimed at restoring peace to the country after years of political turmoil and violence. Click here to read…

Iran space launch fails to put payloads into orbit, official says

Iran’s space launch on Dec 30 failed to put its three payloads into orbit after the rocket was unable to reach the required speed, a defence ministry spokesman said in remarks carried on state television on Dec 31. The attempted launch, which came as indirect U.S.-Iran talks take place in Austria to try to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal, drew criticism from the United States, Germany and France. “For a payload to enter orbit, it needs to reach speeds above 7,600 (metres per second). We reached 7,350,” the spokesman, Ahmad Hosseini, said in a documentary about the launch vehicle broadcast on state TV and posted online. On Dec 30, Hosseini did not clarify whether the devices had reached orbit, but suggested the launch was a test ahead of coming attempts to put satellites into orbit.Iran, which has one of the biggest missile programmes in the Middle East, has suffered several failed satellite launches in the past few years due to technical issues. Washington has said it is concerned by Iran’s development of space launch vehicles, and a German diplomat said Berlin had called on Iran to stop sending satellite launch rockets into space, adding that they violated a U.N. Security Council resolutionClick here to read…

Medical
Remote Antarctic station hit with Covid-19 outbreak

Researchers working at Belgium’s Princess Elisabeth Polar Station in Antarctica have contracted Covid-19, even though all personnel have been inoculated and any new arrival has to follow rigorous safety protocols. Two-thirds of the station’s staff of 25 have been infected with the coronavirus, Belgium’s polar secretariat confirmed to local media earlier this week. But how the virus could have reached the remote station, located some 220km (137 miles) from the Antarctic coast, remains a mystery. “All those present have received two doses of vaccine, and one person has even received a booster shot,” said Alain Hubert, the facility’s executive operator and head of security measures. All staff members also have to undergo a series of PCR tests on their long journey to the station. Those en route there take one PCR test in Belgium before leaving for South Africa and another five days after their arrival. They self-isolate for 10 days in Cape Town, then undergo two further tests: one before leaving for Antarctica and another five days after arriving at the station.Nonetheless, even such strict control measures were apparently not stringent enough, as the first Covid-19 case was reported at the station in mid-December among a group of new arrivals. Click here to read…

1st case of ‘flurona’ reported in Israel

The first case of a potentially dangerous combination of Covid-19 and the flu has been discovered in a young, pregnant, unvaccinated woman in Israel. The hybrid condition was diagnosed at Rabin Medical Center in Petah Tikva earlier this week, when a woman went into labour. “She was diagnosed with the flu and coronavirus as soon as she arrived. Both tests came back positive, even after we checked again,” the head of the hospital’s gynaecology department, Professor Arnon Vizhnitser said, as quoted by newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, which was the first to report on the double infection case. He added that the patient had mild symptoms and that influenza and Covid are actually the same disease because both attack the upper respiratory tract. The woman was discharged from the hospital on Dec 30. “We are seeing more and more pregnant women with the flu. It is definitely a great challenge dealing with a woman who comes in with a fever at childbirth and you do not know if it’s coronavirus or the flu, so you refer to them the same. Most of the illness is respiratory,” Vizhnitser said. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, January 03, 2022

Chinese, Uzbek presidents exchange congratulations on 30th anniversary of diplomatic ties: Xinhuanet
January 2, 2022

Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Uzbek counterpart, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, on Sunday exchanged congratulations on the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries. In his message, Xi said that in the past 30 years, China-Uzbekistan relations have kept pace with the times and forged ahead, setting a fine example of international relations featuring harmonious coexistence and win-win cooperation. Click here to read…

Xi exchanges congratulations with Kazakh leaders on 30th anniversary of diplomatic ties: Xinhuanet
January 3, 2022

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday exchanged congratulatory messages respectively with First President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev and Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev on the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries. In his message to Nazarbayev, Xi noted that since China and Kazakhstan established diplomatic ties 30 years ago, bilateral relations have kept advancing with the times and breaking new ground, and always maintained vigorous development, setting an example of neighboring countries upholding good-neighborliness and pursuing win-win cooperation. Click here to read…

China sees improved external debt structure: Xinhuanet
January 2, 2022

China’s outstanding foreign debt stood at approximately 2.7 trillion U.S. dollars by the end of September, data from the country’s forex regulator shows. The figure was 16.7 billion U.S. dollars, or 0.6 percent, higher than that seen at the end of June, according to the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE). Click here to read…

Chinese “artificial sun” sets new world record: Xinhuanet
December 31, 2021

The experimental advanced superconducting tokamak (EAST), or the Chinese “artificial sun,” has achieved a continuous high-temperature plasma operation for 1,056 seconds in the latest experiment on Thursday, the longest time of operation of its kind in the world. The breakthrough was announced on Friday by Gong Xianzu, a researcher at the Institute of Plasma Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ASIPP), who is in charge of the experiment conducted in Hefei, capital of east China’s Anhui Province. Click here to read…

Full text: 2022 New Year address by President Xi Jinping: Quishi
December 31, 2021

On New Year’s eve, President Xi Jinping delivered his 2022 New Year Address through China Media Group and the Internet. The following is the full text of the address: My greetings to you all. The year 2022 is approaching. From Beijing, I extend New Year wishes to all of you!

The past year has been a year of exceptional significance. We have lived through landmark events in the history of our Party and our country. At the historical convergence of the Two Centenary Goals, we have set out on a new journey of building a modern socialist country in all respects and are making confident strides on the path toward the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation. Click here to read…

China’s second nuclear unit with Hualong One reactor starts power generation: China Daily
January 2, 2022

China’s second nuclear power unit using Hualong One, a domestically designed third-generation nuclear reactor, has begun generating electricity, paving the way for commercial operation. The No. 6 unit in the city of Fuqing, East China’s Fujian province, was connected to the power grid at 10:35 pm on Saturday and started power generation, according to the China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC). Click here to read…

Evergrande’s plush sea resort project in Hainan Island ordered to shut down: Global Times
January 3, 2022

The tourism development unit under the debt-stricken China Evergrande Group was ordered to remove its mega resort project in Danzhou, South China’s Hainan Province, according to an administrative penalty notice issued by local authorities citing the company’s unlawful means of obtaining the project certificate. Click here to read…

Hong Kong independent portal Citizen News says to shut: Reuters
January 3, 2022

Hong Kong independent online news portal Citizen News said on Sunday it will cease operations from Tuesday in the face of what it described as a deteriorating media environment in the Chinese-ruled city and to ensure the safety of its staff. Click here to read…

Vietnam urges China to urgently reopen border gates as trade stalls: Reuters
January 2, 2022

Vietnam’s trade ministry asked China’s Guangxi authorities to take urgent measures to ease congestion at border crossings after China stepped up its border controls with neighbours to follow zero COVID-19 policies, state media reported. Click here to read…

Africa Now – Weekly Newsletter (Week 1, 2022)

Welcome to Africa Now, your weekly newsletter for Africa, presenting the most important developments in the continent – news that matters.

COMMENTARY

African democracy in 2022: 3 elections to watch

In 2022, developments in three key countries—Angola, Kenya, and Senegal—will provide an important bellwether for where the continent is heading. Click here to read…

NEWS

Covid-19 vaccinations: African nations miss WHO target

A target for achieving full vaccination rates of 40% in every country by the end of December has been missed across most of Africa. Click here to read…

Somalia’s allies fear instability as political crisis deepens

Intensifying row between president and prime minister sparks concerns as the country struggles to hold long-delayed elections. Click here to read…

Ethiopia seeks extra $2.5bn to rebuild from war

Ethiopia wants to pass a supplementary budget worth 122 billion birr ($2.5 billion) to help finance programs to rebuild areas destroyed by war and provide humanitarian aid, the Finance Ministry said. Click here to read…

Mali launches four-day forum on return to civilian rule

The military-dominated government holds a national conference as a chance to foster change following the August 2020 coup. Click here to read…

Chinese experts slam foreign media hype over Uganda airport

Chinese experts on Wednesday criticized foreign media outlets for repeating lies about Chinese firm “taking over” the international airport in Uganda’s capital. Click here to read…

Nigeria destroys more than 1 million expired COVID vaccines

Nigeria has destroyed more than a million doses of expired AstraZeneca vaccines in a bid to assure a wary public that they have been taken out of circulation. Click here to read…

Sudan: Mass Demonstrations Begin in Khartoum & Other Cities Demanding Civilian Rule

Mass demonstrations began in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, as well as in other towns, demanding civilian rule and further condemning the coup d’etat carried out in October this year. Click here to read…

Libyan parliament delays next move amid election chaos

Libya’s parliament on Monday postponed a vote on how to handle the fallout from delayed national elections after a chaotic session reflecting the political crisis over the fate of the peace process. Click here to read…

Tanzania signs $1.9 bln railway contract with Turkish firm

Tanzania on Tuesday signed a contract with Turkish firm Yapi Merkezi to build a 368 km section of standard gauge railway that is expected to cost $1.9 billion and will be funded by loans. Click here to read…

Chinese Foreign minister Wang Yi to visit Kenya

Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister, Wang Yi is expected to visit Kenya and two other African countries next week. Click here to read…

Tunisia to borrow $7 bn more in 2022

The Tunisian government on Tuesday (December 28) revealed plans to borrow $7 billion more from foreign lenders and domestic sources to stimulate the country’s economy next year. Click here to read…

Gambia court rejects challenge to Barrow election victory

The Gambia’s Supreme Court has dismissed a plea by the country’s main opposition party to annul the outcome of the December 4 presidential election, in which incumbent Adama Barrow was announced the winner. Click here to read…

Rwanda meets WHO year-end target with over 40% COVID-19 vaccination coverage

Of its 13 million habitants, Rwanda has fully vaccinated 40% against COVID-19 as of 24 December 2021. This coverage milestone puts the country on track for meeting further vaccination global targets set by the World Health Organization. Click here to read…

The African nation aiming to be a hydrogen superpower

“So now finally, we’re on the map,” says Philip Balhoa about Lüderitz, a town in southern Namibia, where harsh desert meets pale ocean. Click here to read…

INDIA IN AFRICA

India gives food aid, defence equipment to Mozambique

India handed over two Fast Interceptor Craft (FIC) and other self defence equipment to Mozambique to assist in its capacity building as the Central African nation battles growing terror threats. Click here to read…

Under Mission Sagar, INS Kesari delivers 500 tonnes of food aid to Mozambique

It is the eighth such deployment under Mission Sagar and is being conducted in close coordination with the ministry of external affairs, and other central government agencies. Click here to read…

Opening Of Sierra Leone Trade Opportunities in India

INDIA SIERRA LEONE SUMMIT was inaugurated by the High Commissioner of Sierra Leone to India His Excellency Rashid Sesay for exploring business relations between the countries of India and Sierra Leone. Further, at the event, Ambassador Rashid Sesay presented his credentials to the President of IndiaClick here to read…

Cabinet clears MoU between India, Mauritius competition regulators

An official release said the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the two regulators is aimed at promoting and strengthening of co-operation in competition law and policy through exchange of information, sharing of best practices and capacity building initiatives. Click here to read…

India welcomes Egypt as member of New Development Bank of BRICS

India on December 30 welcomed Egypt’s entry as the fourth new member of the New Development Bank (NDB) that was established by the BRICS countries six years ago. Click here to read…

India’s agricultural and processed food exports grew steadily in last decade

India’s agricultural and processed food exports have grown at a steady pace in the last decade notwithstanding several logistical challenges faced in the global trade of the commodities. Click here to read…

Merchant vessel captain returns to India after spending 16 months in Mauritius jail over oil spill

The Japanese bulk carrier MV Wakashio, under the command of Captain Sunil Kumar Nandeshwar, was en route to Brazil from China when it veered off its course and hit a coral reefClick here to read…
Seychelles Gears Up to Welcome Indians Next Year
Seychelles, a short haul destination for India, has carved a niche positioning in the Indian outbound travel market. Click here to read…

No passports, no money: 62 Indians stranded in Sudan ask, ‘how do we exit the country?


A few weeks ago, the employees at both RAK Ceramics and Al Masa porcelain factory desperately contacted the Indian embassy in Khartoum, asking for help. Click here to read…

VIF News Digest: National Security – Defence Studies & Terrorism, 16-31 December 2021

DEFENCE

  • Third Annual Defence Dialogue between India and France.
  • New generation ballistic missile successfully test-fired.
  • India beyond 75.
  • Controlled Aerial Delivery System.
  • Defence Agreement with Russia on Assault Rifles.
  • Violation of LoC by Pakistan.
  • LCA Tejas.
  • Maiden launch surface-to-surface missile ‘Pralay’.
  • High-speed Expendable Aerial Target (HEAT) Abhyas.
  • Mission SAGAR.
  • Chief of the Air Staff is on a four day official visit to the Republic of Korea.
  • Indian Army Establishes Quantum Laboratory.
  • Year End Review – 2021 of Ministry of Defence.

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM

Africa
Nigeria
  • Boko Haram fired rockets targeting Maiduguri airport as Buhari’s plane arrived.
  • Nigerian Army foiled an attack and killed seven ISWAP terrorists in Yobe town.
Afghanistan
  • “Terrorists being legalised, as Taliban granting passports to al-Qa’ida and IS terrorists”: said an Afghan diplomat.
  • “Al-Qa’ida aims to benefit from Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan”: said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
Pakistan
  • Pakistan’s cabinet approved its first National Security Policy.

DOMESTIC TERRORISM

Jammu and Kashmir
  • NIA filed charge-sheet against LeT terrorists in ‘Darbhanga Railway Station blast’ case.
  • NIA filed charge-sheet against TRF terrorists in ‘Recovery of IED at Bhatindi’ case.
  • Security forces eliminated five terrorists in three separate CT operations in Pulwama, Shopian, and Anantnag.
  • J&K police arrested four JeM terrorists from Pulwama.
  • Security forces killed four LeT and JeM terrorists in two separate CT operations in Shopian and Awantipora.
  • HM terrorist eliminated in a joint CT operation in Anantnag.
Left-Wing Extremism
  • Two Maoists killed in gun-battle with security forces in Chhattisgarh.
  • Security forces eliminated six Maoists in Telangana-Chhattisgarh border area.
Khalistan-inspired Extremism
  • ‘Targeted killing by KTF terrorists’ case: NIA filed charge-sheet against four KTF terrorists.
  • ‘Killing of Comrade Balwinder Singh Sandhu, SC awardee’ case: NIA filed supplementary charge-sheet against three KLF terrorists.
  • Pakistan-based pro-Khalistan terror group conspired the Ludhiana Court complex blast.
  • ‘Ludhiana Court Complex Blast’: pro-Khalistan terrorist Jaswinder Singh Multani arrested from Germany.
  • Police arrested three pro-Khalistan operatives from Patiala.
Islamic Extremism
  • ‘Recovery & Explosion of IED at Bodh Gaya case’: NIA Special Court (Patna) convicted eight JMB terrorists.
Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICN) Cases
  • ‘Baishnabnagar FICN case’: NIA Special Court (Kolkata) sentenced two accused.

CYBER, INFORMATION WARFARE & AI (SECURITY PERSPECTIVE)

  • China regulators suspended Cyber Security deal with Alibaba cloud.
  • Ukraine accused Russia of Information Warfare after the arrests of 106 ‘neo-Nazi’ supporters.

DEFENCE

Third Annual Defence Dialogue between India and France.

The third Annual Defence Dialogue between India and France took place between Raksha Mantri(RM) and French Minister for Armed Forces Ms Florence Parly in New Delhi on December 17, 2021. A wide range of bilateral, regional, defence and defence industrial cooperation issues were discussed in the annual meeting.

The Ministers reviewed the existing military-to-military cooperation, which has increased in spite of pandemic challenges. They discussed ways to increase defence cooperation in all domains. Defence industrial cooperation was discussed with focus on future collaborations and co-production between the two countries. They expressed commitment to work together to enhance cooperation in bilateral, regional and multilateral forums. France is the current chair of Indian Ocean Naval Symposium and shall take over the Presidency of European Union from January 01, 2022. The two Ministers decided to work closely on a number of issues during the French Presidency. Click here to read…

New generation ballistic missile successfully test-fired.

Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) successfully tested the new generation nuclear capable ballistic missile ‘Agni P’ on December 18, 2021. The Agni P is a two-stage canisterised solid propellant ballistic missile with dual redundant navigation and guidance system. Click here to read…

India beyond 75.

The RM addressed the 94th Annual General Meeting of Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI), on the theme ‘India Beyond 75’, in New Delhi on December 18, 2021. He voiced the Government’s vision to make India a global defence manufacturing hub in the coming times, stressing that the focus is to modernise the Armed Forces and create a strong & ‘Aatmanirbhar’ defence industry which can help in safeguarding the country from conventional and non-conventional, present and future security threats. He also stated that he saw the “defence and aerospace manufacturing market in India to be Rs five lakh crore by 2047. The present contribution of private companies is Rs 18,000 crore in the market of Rs 85,000 crore. According to the current situation, more than Rs one lakh crore will be the contribution of the private sector in the market Rs five lakh crore in the future”. Click here to read…

Controlled Aerial Delivery System.

Aerial Delivery Research and Development Establishment (ADRDE), Agra conducted a flight demonstration of Controlled Aerial Delivery System of 500 kg capacity (CADS-500) on December 18, 2021. The CADS-500 is used for precise delivery of payload upto 500 kgs at predetermined location by making use of manoeuvrable capabilities of Ram Air Parachute (RAP). It uses Global Positioning System for the coordinates, altitude and heading sensors for the heading information during its flight. The CADS, with its onboard electronics unit, autonomously steers its flight path using waypoint navigation towards target location by operating controls. System performance was demonstrated at Drop Zone, Malpura from an altitude of 5000m. The system was para-dropped from AN32 aircraft and then steered to the pre-designated landing point in autonomous mode. Click here to read…

Defence Agreement with Russia on Assault Rifles.

A contract for procurement of quantity 6,01,427 Assault Rifles AK-203 was signed on December 06, 2021 between Ministry of Defence and M/s Indo-Russian Rifles Private Limited (IRRPL)- a Joint Venture established between India, represented by the Defence PSUs-Advanced Weapons & Equipment India Limited (AWEIL) & Munitions India Limited (MIL) and Russia, represented by Rosoboronexport (RoE) & Concern Kalashnikov (CK), in the share holding of 50.5% and 49.5% respectively. These rifles will be produced by M/s IRRPL at Korwa, Uttar Pradesh. Click here to read…

Violation of LoC by Pakistan.

A total 5,601 instances of Cease Fire Violations (CFVs) were reported along the LoC under operational control of Indian Army in Jammu & Kashmir from 30 November 2019 to 29 November 2021. Click here to read…

LCA Tejas.

Tejas LCA is not being inducted as a replacement of MIG-21 fighter aircraft, but as a part of modernisation of IAF. Amount spent so far on the manufacture of 24 LCA Tejas delivered till 30.09.2021 is Rs 6,653 crore. Considering the contract with HAL by IAF, a total of 123 Tejas fighter aircraft are to be manufactured. Click here to read…

Maiden launch surface-to-surface missile ‘Pralay’.

(DRDO) successfully conducted maiden flight test of indigenously developed surface-to-surface missile ‘Pralay’, from Dr A P J Abdul Kalam Island off the coast of Odisha on December 22, 2021. The Missile is powered with solid propellant rocket motor and many new technologies. The missile has a range of 150-500 kilometre and can be launched from a mobile launcher. The missile guidance system includes state-of-the-art navigation system and integrated avionics. Click here to read…

High-speed Expendable Aerial Target (HEAT) Abhyas.

DRDO successfully conducted the flight test of indigenously developed High-speed Expendable Aerial Target (HEAT) Abhyas. During the flight trial, High subsonic speed trajectory at a very low altitude with high endurance was demonstrated. Two boosters provided initial acceleration during launch and a small turbo jet engine is used to sustain high subsonic speed with long endurance. The indigenous data link designed by Bengaluru based Industry partner has been successfully flown and tested during the flight. Click here to read…

Mission SAGAR.

As part of a deployment undertaken by Indian Navy under Mission SAGAR, Indian Naval Ship Kesari entered Port of Maputo, Mozambique on 25 December 2021. About 500 Tons of food aid has been shipped by INS Kesari to support the efforts of Government of Mozambique to cope with ongoing drought and concurrent challenges of pandemic. India also remains committed to supporting the capacity building efforts of the Armed Forces of Mozambique. To this end INS Kesari is carrying two Fast Interceptor Craft and self defence equipment to be handed over to the Armed Forces of Mozambique. Click here to read…

Chief of the Air Staff is on a four day official visit to the Republic of Korea.

Air Chief Marshal VR Chaudhari PVSM AVSM VM ADC, Chief of the Air Staff is on a four day official visit to the Republic of Korea till 30 Dec 21. The CAS will be calling on the Minister of National Defence, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Chief of Staff of the Republic of Korea Air Force and visiting important defence establishments. The visit of CAS is expected to bolster ties with the Armed Forces of the Republic of Korea.

Indian Army Establishes Quantum Laboratory.

The Army, with support from the National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS) has recently established the Quantum Lab at Military College of Telecommunication Engineering, Mhow (MP) MCTE to spearhead research and training in this key developing field. Indian Army has also established an Artificial Intelligence (AI) Centre at the same institution. Training on cyber warfare is being imparted through a state of art cyber range, and cyber security labs. Click here to read…

Year End Review – 2021 of Ministry of Defence.

The key highlights of the defence forces and the ministry of defence was released in a yearend review paper. Some areas besides the three services contributions were Atmanirbhar Bharat, Swarnim Vijay Varsh, Strengthening border infrastructure, Contribution of MoD in fight against COVID-19, contribution by the Department of Defence, Department of Military affairs, Department of Defence Production and other key stake holders were set out. Click here to read…

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM

Africa
Nigeria
Boko Haram fired rockets targeting Maiduguri airport as Buhari’s plane arrived.

On 23 December 2021, Boko Haram terrorists fired several rockets at Maiduguri airport, as President Muhammadu Buhari’s plane arrived in the Borno capital during a State visit to Governor Babagana Zulum. No fatalities or injuries were reported. Click here to read…

Nigerian Army foiled an attack and killed seven ISWAP terrorists in Yobe town.

On 26 December 2021, the Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists carried out an attack in Buni Yadi, Gujba LGA of Yobe state, but the attack was deterred by the Nigerian Army. “The terrorists used cows as their shield in order to gain easy access without being noticed, but their evil plan and strategy were unravelled by the troops, who quickly engaged them in a gun battle. Seven of the ISWAP terrorists were killed, while five others were arrested,” said a Nigerian intelligence official on the basis of anonymity. Click here to read…

Afghanistan
“Terrorists being legalised, as Taliban granting passports to al-Qa’ida and IS terrorists”: said an Afghan diplomat.

The Taliban is legalising terrorism by granting Afghan passports to al-Qa’ida and Islamic State (IS) terrorists. “The whole world should know that all terrorists from al-Qa’ida and IS in Afghanistan are given Afghan passports by the Taliban. This is a serious signal to all mankind that terrorists are being legalised,” said the Afghan Ambassador to Tajikistan— Muhammad Zahir Agbar.

“…the Taliban leadership has not yet brought their families to Afghanistan, who are residing in Qatar, Dubai, and Pakistan. They [Taliban] have not paid their military personnel for several months. Disagreements have emerged among the Taliban…and women hold protests against this regime almost every day,” said the Ambassador Agbar. Click here to read…

“Al-Qa’ida aims to benefit from Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan”: said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister.

In an international conference on the fight against terrorism, on 22 December 2021, the Russian Deputy Foreign Minister— Oleg Syromolotov informed that terrorist organisations, including al-Qa’ida, consider Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan as a victory of radicalism.

“Unfortunately, the actions of the United States and its partners only undermine the situation. Instead of admitting mistakes and refusing to dictate, they took the financial leverage to push their demands on the Taliban movement,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Syromolotov. On 15 August 2021, the Taliban captured Kabul, and following this Afghanistan has been suffering with deep economic, humanitarian, and security crises. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Pakistan’s cabinet approved its first National Security Policy.

On 28 December 2021, Pakistan’s cabinet approved a security plan as country’s first National Security Policy (NSP), which aims at guiding economic, foreign, and defence policies. “It is truly historic achievement; a citizen-centric comprehensive national security policy with economic security at the core will now be pursued in earnest,” tweeted Pakistan’s National Security Adviser (NSA)—Moeed Yusuf.

“The policy was an important milestone in strengthening Pakistan’s national security. Pakistan’s armed forces will play their due part in achieving the vision laid out in the policy,” said Major General Babar Iftikhar. Click here to read…

DOMESTIC TERRORISM

Jammu and Kashmir
NIA filed charge-sheet against LeT terrorists in ‘Darbhanga Railway Station blast’ case.

On 23 December 2021, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) filed a charge-sheet against five Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorists— i) Mohammad Nasir Khan, ii) Imran Malik, iii) Saleem Ahmed aka Haji Saleem, iv) Kafil Ahmad aka Kafil, and v) Iqbal Mohammad, in ‘Darbhanga Railway Station blast’ case— RC-13/2021/NIA/DLI.

Investigation revealed that LeT terrorists conspired to set ablaze a moving long-distance train by placing Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) in the train. For executing the attack, Mohammad Nasir Khan and Imran Malik received instructions from Pakistan-based LeT terrorist— Hafeez Iqbal. Both terrorists placed the IED bomb in a parcel of clothes and booked the same in Secundrabad-Darbhanga Express. Earlier, Nasir Khan had travelled to Pakistan and received training in espionage and fabricating IEDs. Click here to read…

NIA filed charge-sheet against TRF terrorists in ‘Recovery of IED at Bhatindi’ case.

On 22 December 2021, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) filed charge-sheet against three The Resistance Front (TRF) terrorists— i) Nadeemul-Haq, ii) NadeemAyoub Rather, and iii) Talibur-Rehman, in ‘Recovery of IED at Bhatindi’ case, before NIA Special Court (Jammu).

The charge-sheet in the case— RC-04/2021/NIA/JMU, filed under Sections 120B, 121A, and 122 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), Section 18, 18B, 19, 20, and 23 of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act [UA(P)A], Section 4 and 5 of the Explosive Substances Act (ESA). During the investigation, it was found that the three TRF terrorists were receiving instructions from Pakistan-based TRF handlers via WhatsApp application. Click here to read…

Security forces eliminated five terrorists in three separate CT operations in Pulwama, Shopian, and Anantnag.

In three separate counter-terrorism (CT) operations on 25-26 December 2021, security forces eliminated five terrorists, including an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) expert, linked with al-Qa’ida in Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir (IS-JK)— an Islamic State affiliated terror group, and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), in Pulwama, Shopian, and Anantnag districts of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). “The IS-JK terrorist— Faheem Bhat, has recently joined the terror group and was involved in killing of Assistant Sub-Inspector (ASI) Mohammad Ashraf on 22 December 2021; ASI Ashraf was posted at Police Station (Bijbehara),” said Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Kashmir— Vijay Kumar. Click here to read…

J&K police arrested four JeM OGWs from Pulwama.

On 21 December 2021, Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) police cracked a Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM)’s terror cell and arrested four Over-Ground Workers (OGWs)— i) Zubair Gul, ii) Adil Fayaz Ganie, iii) Basit Ali, and iv) Shahid Nabi Pandit, from Pampore area in Pulwama district of J&K. The preliminary interrogation revealed that all four OGWs were in contact with JeM commanders and were providing logistic support to them. Click here to read…

Security forces killed four LeT and JeM terrorists in two separate CT operations in Shopian and Awantipora.

In two separate counter-terrorism (CT) operations on 25 December 2021, security forces killed four terrorists of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), in Shopian and Pulwama districts of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). According to the statements released by police, Two LeT terrorists— i) Sajad Ahmad Chak, and ii) Raja Basit Yaqoob, were killed in Chowgam area of Shopian, whereas, other two terrorists of JeM were killed in a separate CT operation in Hardumir in Tral area of Awantipora in Pulwama district. Click here to read…

HM terrorist eliminated in a joint CT operation in Anantnag.

In a joint counter-terrorism (CT) operation on 24 December 2021, security forces killed a Hizbul-Mujahideen (HM) terrorist— Shahzad Ahmad Shah, in Mominhall village of Arwani in Bijbehara in Anantnag district of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). Shahzad was given several calls to surrender, but instead he fired upon security forces personnel; he was involved in the killing three BhartiyaJanta Party (BJP) workers in October 2020, and a BJP Sarpanch & his wife in August 2021. Click here to read…

Left-Wing Extremism
Two Maoists killed in gun-battle with security forces in Chhattisgarh.

On 18 December 2021, security forces eliminated two women Maoists— i) Hidme Kohrame, and ii) Pojje, in a gun-battle in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh. “Acting upon inputs, a team of Dantewada’s District Reserve Guards (DRG) carried out search operation in Gonderas near Aranpur. The Maoists opened fire which led to gun-battle. Later, security forces recovered bodies of two female Maoists from the operation site,” said Dantewada Superintendent of Police (SP) Abhishek Pallava. Dantewada is among the seven Maoist-affected districts in Bastar region in Chhattisgarh. Click here to read…

Security forces eliminated six Maoists in Telangana-Chhattisgarh border area.

On 27 December 2021, security forces killed six Maoists during an operation in Telangana-Chhattisgarh border area. Acting upon intelligence input, Greyhounds (elite anti-Maoist force of Telangana police), District Reserve Guards (DRGs) in Sukma district of Chhattisgarh, and 141st Battalion of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), launched a joint search operation at Pesallapadu forest. Six Maoists, including four women, fired upon security forces which led to exchange of fire. All six Maoists were killed. Later, security forces recovered five weapons, two .303 rifles, four rocket launchers, and three double barrel guns from the operation site,” said Sunil Dutt, Superintendent of Police (SP)-BhadradriKothagudem district in Telangana. Click here to read…

Khalistan-inspired Extremism
‘Targeted killing by KTF terrorists’ case: NIA filed charge-sheet against four KTF terrorists.

On 23 December 2021, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) filed a charge-sheet against four terrorists of the Khalistan Tiger Force (KTF)— i) Kamaljeet Sharma, ii) Ram Singh aka Sona, iii) Arshdeep Singh aka Arsh, and iv) Hardeep Singh Nijjar (presently in Canada), before the NIA Special Court in Mohali, Punjab. The case— RC-28/2021/NIA/DLI, related to the killing of Manohar Lal (follower of Dera Saccha Sauda) by the KTF terrorists.

The investigation revealed that Hardeep Singh Nijjar— ‘self-claimed’ chief of KTF, along with Arshdeep Singh, had recruited Kamaljeet Sharma, Ram Singh and others in Punjab in order to threat and exhort money from Punjab-based businessmen, and conspired targeted killings to disturb the communal peace and harmony in the state. Click here to read…

‘Killing of Comrade Balwinder Singh Sandhu, SC awardee’ case: NIA filed supplementary charge-sheet against three KLF terrorists.

On 16 December 2021, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) filed supplementary charge-sheet against three Khalistan Liberation Force (KLF) terrorists— i) Navpreet Singh, ii) Harbhinder Singh, and iii) Gurwinder Singh, in the case— RC-01/2020/NIA/DLI, related to the killing of Comrade Balwinder Singh Sandhu (Shaurya Chakra awardee, by KLF terrorists on 16 October 2020 at his residence in Bhikhiwind in Tarn Taran district in Punjab.

Investigation revealed that all three charge-sheet KLF terrorists were involved in conducting reconnaissance of the target and organising logistics for the assassins. Click here to read…

Pakistan-based pro-Khalistan terror group conspired the Ludhiana Court complex blast.

According to an intelligence input, a pro-Khalistan terror group based in Lahore, Pakistan, masterminded the explosion in Ludhiana Court Complex in Ludhiana, Punjab. On 23 December 2021, a blast took place in the Ludhiana Court complex, in which a person was killed and at least five others were injured. The Central agencies have been sending inputs to the State government on daily basis. The recent intel emphasised on possible interference by radicalised groups before the assembly elections scheduled in early 2022. Click here to read…

Ludhiana Court Complex Blast: pro-Khalistan terrorist Jaswinder Singh Multani arrested from Germany.

On 28 December 2021, Germany’s Federal Police arrested a pro-Khalistan terrorist— Jaswinder Singh Multani, for his alleged involvement in the Ludhiana Court complex blast on 23 December. The Indian government had requested German government to arrest Jaswinder, as he was under scanner for conspiring the India’s financial capital— Mumbai and the national capital— Delhi.

According to preliminary investigation, Jaswinder is a key link in Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI)’s plan to orchestrated terror attacks in Punjab as well as Mumbai. Click here to read…

Police arrested three pro-Khalistan operatives from Patiala.

Punjab police, on 28 December 2021, arrested three pro-Khalistan operatives, including a woman, for allegedly distributing pro-Khalistan material nearby Banur area in Patiala district in Punjab. “Out of three, two operatives— i) Jagmeet Singh, and ii) Ravinder Singh, were arrested for ‘preaching in favour of Khalistan’. Both were visiting various religious and public places in the area and distributing some registration forms to people to vote for a ‘Khalistan Referendum 2020’,” said Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP)— Harcharan Singh Bhullar.

The initial interrogation revealed that the third operative— Jasveer Kaur, and her husband— Kuldeep Singh (works as Superintendent at Punjab Roadways), are the kingpin the network. “Jasveer Kaur’s brother-in-law— Manjit Singh was the area commander of the terrorist organisation— BabbarKhalsa International (BKI)’s SukhdevBabbar Group. Click here to read…

Islamic Extremism
‘Recovery & Explosion of IED at Bodh Gaya case’: NIA Special Court (Patna) convicted eight JMB terrorists.

On 17 December 2021, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) Special Court (Patna) convicted eight Jamaatul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) terrorists— i) Paigambar Sheikh, ii) Ahmad Ali, iii) NurAlamMomin, iv) Adil Sheikh, v) Dilwar Hossain, vi) Abdul Karim, vii) Mustafizur Rahman, and viii) ArifHussain, in ‘Recovery and Explosion of IED at Bodh Gaya’ case— RC-04/2018/NIA/DLI.

The case is related to the planting of three Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) in and around the premises of Bodh Gaya Temple complex. Click here to read…

Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICNs) Cases
‘Baishnabnagar FICN case’: NIA Special Court (Kolkata) sentenced two accused.

In Baishnabnagar Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICNs) case— RC-08/2018/NIA/DLI, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) Special Court, Kolkata, on 22 December 2021, sentenced two accused— i) Santosh Mondal (25 years-old), and ii) Pintu Mondal (20 years-old), to rigorous imprisonment of five years and six months, and also imposed ₹ 40,000 fine for commission of offences under Sections 120B, 489B, and 489C of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

The case is related to the seizure of FICNs with face value of ₹ 4,62,000, in the denomination of ₹ 2,000, from the possession of Santosh Mondal. The NIA had filed charge-sheet against both accused on 03 April 2018. Click here to read…

CYBER, INFORMATION WARFARE & AI (SECURITY PERSPECTIVE)

China’s telecom regulators suspended Cyber Security deal with Alibaba cloud.

On 22 December 2021, China’s telecom regulators suspended an information-sharing partnership with Alibaba’s Cloud Computing— a subsidiary of Alibaba Group, considering accusations it failed to report and address cyber security vulnerability. “Alibaba Cloud did not immediately report vulnerabilities in popular, open-source logging framework—Apache Log4j2 to China’s telecommunications regulator,” stated a notice released by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT). The suspension will be reassessed in six months and revived depending on the Alibaba’s internal reforms. Click here to read…

Ukraine accused Russia of Information Warfare after the arrests of 106 ‘neo-Nazi’ supporters.

The Security Service of Ukraine— Sluzhba Bezpeky Unkrayiny or SBU, accused its Russian counterpart— Federal Security Service (Federal’naya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti) of waging Information Warfare (IW) after Russian law-enforcement agencies arrested 106 supporters of the Ukrainian neo-Nazi youth group for planning attacks and mass murders. Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) made arrests in 37 of more than 80 regions of Russia. According to the statement released by the FSB, the alleged group— MKU, was set up by a Ukrainian under the patronage of Ukraine’s intelligence services.

“The current statements of the FSB are part of a coordinated information operation which should only be viewed through the prism of hybrid warfare,” read the statement released by the Ukraine’s SBU. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, December 31, 2021

China’s Chongqing appoints acting mayor: Xinhuanet
December 30, 2021

Hu Henghua was appointed deputy mayor and acting mayor of southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality on Thursday. The appointment was made at the 30th session of the Standing Committee of the fifth Chongqing Municipal People’s Congress, the local legislature. The session also accepted the resignation of Tang Liangzhi from the post of Chongqing mayor. Click here to read…

Villages in China all connected to broadband internet service: Xinhuanet
December 31, 2021

China’s administrative villages had all been connected to broadband internet services by the end of November, authorities said on Thursday. This is a historic achievement in solving the communication difficulties in poor areas, Xie Cun, an official with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said during a press conference, adding that this achievement will provide solid internet support for China’s rural vitalization and modernization. Click here to read…

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi gives interview to Xinhua News Agency and China Media Group on international situation and China’s diplomacy in 2021: Quishi
December 31, 2021

The following is a transcript of an interview given by State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi to Xinhua News Agency and China Media Group on the international situation and China’s diplomacy in 2021 on December 30.

Question: In 2021, the Communist Party of China (CPC) celebrated its centenary, and China completed the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects and achieved its first centenary goal. China’s head-of-state “cloud diplomacy” was also very frequent. What is your overall assessment of China’s diplomacy in 2021? Click here to read…

Aircraft carrier Liaoning wraps up open sea exercises and deals with foreign close-in reconnaissance: Global Times
December 31, 2021

The Liaoning aircraft carrier group of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy on Thursday wrapped up real combat scenario open seas exercises with the flotilla conducting comprehensive confrontational drills in the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea and the West Pacific for 21 days, enhancing the combat capability of the carrier group as a system. Click here to read…

China’s high-speed rail hits new milestone as it reaches the length of Equator: Global Times
December 30, 2021

China’s high-speed rail network hits a new milestone on Thursday, as it reached the length of the equator at around 40,000 kilometers, after a railway linking Anqing in East China’s Anhui Province and Jiujiang in East China’s Jiangxi Province with a designed speed of 350 kilometers per hour officially came online. Click here to read…

China’s Huawei says 2021 revenues down almost 30%, sees challenges ahead: Reuters
December 31, 2021

Chinese telecoms equipment giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd (HWT.UL), battered by U.S. sanctions, expects 2021 revenue to have declined nearly 30% and predicted continued challenges in the New Year. Revenue for the year is expected to be 634 billion yuan ($99.48 billion), rotating chairman Guo Ping said in a New Year letter to employees on Friday. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, December 30, 2021

Beijing raises NEV quota in 2022 new car plate allocation: Xinhuanet
December 29, 2021

Beijing Municipality will raise the quota of new-energy vehicles (NEVs) in the new car license plate allocation next year, authorities announced Wednesday. The city will allocate 100,000 new car plates in 2022, and the quota for NEVs will be increased from 60,000 to 70,000, according to the municipal office for car quota allocation management. Click here to read…

China unveils five-year plan to boost raw materials industry: Xinhuanet
December 29, 2021

Chinese authorities on Wednesday unveiled a plan to facilitate the development of the country’s raw materials industry during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025). By 2025, a new development pattern for China’s raw materials sector that features higher quality, better profitability and distribution, low carbon, and more security will take shape, said the plan. It was issued jointly by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and two other government bodies. Click here to read…

Former senior provincial official indicted for graft, sheltering mafia-like gangs: Xinhuanet
December 29, 2021

Wang Like, a former senior Party official in east China’s Jiangsu Province, has been indicted on charges of taking and offering bribes, harboring and conniving mafia-like organizations, and forging identity documents, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) said Wednesday. Click here to read…

Egypt to join BRICS New Development Bank: People’s Daily
December 30, 2021

The BRICS New Development Bank (NDB) announced Wednesday that it will add Egypt as its new member. “We are delighted to welcome Egypt into NDB’s family. We look forward to supporting its investment needs in infrastructure and sustainable development,” said Marcos Troyjo, president of the NDB. Click here to read…

China, Russia to sign new 5-year space cooperation program, build intl lunar station by 2035: Global Times
December 29, 2021

China and Russia will sign a new space Cooperation Program for 2023-2027 next year, which will include a plan to create an open and inclusive International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) by 2035, Russia’s national space agency Roscosmos told the Global Times in an exclusive interviewClick here to read…

China standardizes names of 15 more places in Zangnan based on sovereignty and history: Global Times
December 30, 2021

China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs announced on Wednesday that it had standardized in Chinese characters, Tibetan and Roman alphabet the names of 15 places in Zangnan (the southern part of China’s Xizang), in accordance with regulations on geographical names issued by the State Council. Click here to read…

Chinese customs fully prepares for the implementation of RCEP: Global Times
December 29, 2021

Chinese customs said it has fully prepared for the implementation of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), days ahead of the formal implementation for the largest trade agreement. In terms of rules of origin and tariff concessions, the General Administration of Customs said on Wednesday that it has completed 38 specific tasks to ensure the full implementation of the rules of origin and the agreed tax rate, and established the shared information system of visa data and customs clearance data. Click here to read…

Afghan officials discuss digital currency with Chinese businessmen: Global Times
December 29, 2021

Amid a deepening financial crisis that is putting Afghanistan’s financial system on the brink of collapse, Afghan Taliban officials have approached Chinese businessmen and discussed topics concerning digital currency, a possible solution that some said could provide short-term relief to the capital crunch of the war-torn country, sources told the Global Times on WednesdayClick here to read…

China to speed up use of next-generation tech like 5G, AI in rare-earth industry: Global Times
December 29, 2021

A senior Chinese official on Wednesday called on rare-earth companies to accelerate their digital transformation and carry out mergers and reorganizations, as the country has moved swiftly to upgrade the crucial sector and build an efficient, robust industry cluster. The use of high technologies marked by 5G, artificial intelligence and the industrial internet should be integrated with the rare-earth industry to enhance production efficiency and product quality, Chang Guowu, an official from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), said at a press conference in Beijing. Click here to read…

China’s jobseekers search for ‘stability’ as coronavirus and regulatory crackdowns take toll: South China Morning Post
December 30, 2021

Zhang Qijing left China for the United Kingdom last October to pursue a master’s degree she hoped would help her change career. Business at the inbound travel agency she worked for was decimated by pandemic travel restrictions and she wanted a fresh start. A higher degree would give her an edge in the labour market and help secure a more stable job as a public school teacher, she said. Pursuing further education seemed like an efficient way to wait out the pandemic too. Click here to read…

Tattoos targeted as Chinese authorities seek to set ‘good example’: Reuters
December 30, 2021

Chinese authorities have banned footballers from getting tattoos and instructed national team players who have been inked to remove or cover them up to set a “good example for society”. A growing number of high-profile Chinese players have been sporting tattoos, including international defender Zhang Linpeng, who has previously been told to cover up while appearing for both the national team and club side Guangzhou FC. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, December 29, 2021

CPC leadership stresses enhancing historical confidence, unity, fighting spirit: Xinhuanet
December 29, 2021

A meeting of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee has stressed strengthening the Party members’ historical confidence, unity and their fighting spirit. The two-day meeting of criticism and self-criticism, themed on studying the Party’s history, stressed carrying forward the Party’s great founding spirit and upholding its historical experience from the endeavors over the past century. Click here to read…

Full Text: China’s Export Controls: Xinhuanet
December 29, 2021

The State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China published a white paper titled “China’s Export Controls” on Wednesday. Following is the full text of the white paper:

China’s Export Controls

The State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China Click here to read…

China issues plan on digitalization, networking of manufacuturing: Xinhuanews
December 28, 2021

China will see 70 percent of its major manufacturing firms basically digitalized and networked by 2025, according to a development plan on smart manufacturing. The plan, issued by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and other departments, also states that all of China’s manufacturing firms above a designated size will be digitalized and networked by 2035. Click here to read…

China to see breakthroughs in robotics by 2025: People’s Daily
December 29, 2021

China has pledged to achieve breakthroughs in core robotic technologies and related high-end products by 2025, according to a guideline released Tuesday. The country will strive to become a global hub for robotics innovation by then, attaining the performance and reliability for key robot components to meet international standards, said the guideline jointly issued by state organs such as the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. Click here to read…

China’s central bank governor pledges stronger support for real economy: Quishi
December 29, 2021

As China has mapped out priorities for the economic work of 2022 at a key meeting earlier this month, the country’s central bank governor Yi Gang in a recent interview elaborated on the bank’s working agenda for the coming year. Speaking to Xinhua, Yi, governor of the People’s Bank of China, talked about stronger financial support for the real economy and carbon-neutrality goals. Click here to read…

Near miss in outer space prompts call for US respect: China Daily
December 29, 2021

China on Tuesday revealed that its space station has had to avoid two collisions with SpaceX satellites, and called on the United States to respect the international order in outer space and to safeguard the safety of astronauts in orbit. Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian made the remarks while confirming that China’s permanent mission to the United Nations had submitted a note verbale to the UN secretary-general for safety reasons earlier this month. Click here to read…

HK police arrest six people linked to Stand News following new charge against Apple Daily staff on inflammatory publications: Global Times
December 29, 2021

The Hong Kong Police Force National Security Department arrested seven people on the suspicion of sedition on Wednesday, including six linked to an online news site and one from the secessionist tabloid Apple Daily. Over 200 police officers also searched the offices of Stand News and took away about 30 boxes of materials of evidence including computers and documents Wednesday noon. Click here to read…

China outlines vision for four mega data centre clusters: Reuters
December 29, 2021

China has approved plans to build four mega clusters of data centres in the country’s north and west with the aim of supporting the data needs of Beijing and major coastal centres, according to the country’s top state planner on Wednesday. The clusters will be built in the northern Inner Mongolia region, northwestern Ningxia region, Gansu province and southwestern Guizhou province, the National Development and Reform Commission said in four separate statements. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: December 29, 2021

Afghanistan
7,000 CCNPP Projects Remain Unfinished: MoF: Tolo News

The Ministry of Finance (MoF) said on Monday that at least 7,000 projects of the Citizens’ Charter National Priority Program (CCNPP) remained unfinished across Afghanistan. Click here to read…

No threat from Afghanistan’s borders to region: Taliban reacted to Putin’s concerns: The Khaama Press

A spokesperson of the Taliban Inamullah Samangani reacted to the recent concerns of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and added that there is no threat from Afghanistan’s borders to regional countries. Click here to read…

Shi’ite people ask Taliban to formalize their sect: The Khaama Press

Shi’ite people in Afghanistan in a statement asked the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan to formalize their sect and protect their citizenship rights in the framework of an inclusive government. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
Rethinking Bangladesh: A special issue- HIMAL: SOUTH ASIAN

Rethinking Bangladesh, which brings together over a dozen writers and artists, many of them based in Bangladesh, and all of them with expertise and informed insights on the country. Click here to read…

Two more omicron cases found- Asian Age

Bangladesh has identified two more cases of omicron, taking the tally of new variant infections to four. Click here to read…

‘Don’t lecture us about democracy while sheltering murderers’- Asian Age

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has hit back at the United States for criticizing democracy and human rights in Bangladesh while giving shelter to a killer of Father of Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Click here to read…

Awami League activist killed in post-polls violence in Pabna- Dhaka Tribune

n Awami League activist was killed in post-polls violence that broke out in the Nazirpur Hatpara area of Hemayetpur union in Pabna Sadar on Tuesday evening. Click here to read…

Banks’ call centres failing to live up to expectations- Daily Star

Al Hossain Chisty, a client of a private commercial bank, tried to talk to the bank’s call centre executives to get some explanation about statement related to his credit card. Click here to read…

Bhutan
Inconsistencies in court rulings over State land encroachment cases?- Kuensel

The Supreme Court, it was learnt, had summoned both the appellants and prosecutors in the Trongsa controversial land case days after the appellant’s daughter appeared in a video with an allegation of a miscarriage of judgment went viral. Click here to read…

Anam appointed Asia News Network’s next Chairman- Kuensel

Thailand: Respected Bangladeshi journalist Mahfuz Anam, who is the editor and publisher of Bangladesh’s largest selling English daily – The Daily Star – has been elected Asia News Network’s (ANN) next Chairman. Click here to read…

Finance Minister fires warning letter to landlords over rental income- Daily Bhutan
A notification signed by the finance minister Namgay Tshering notified all the ‘real’ property owners to declare the annual rental income correctly while filing the PIT returns for the Income Year 2021. Click here to read…
MoAF makes steady head ways in 2021- Bhutan Times

The year 2021 saw the Ministry of Agriculture and Forests (MoAF) assisting the sourcing excess of vegetables, fruits and livestock products from the dzongkhags to Thimphu during the lockdown. Click here to read…

Maldives
Economic growth is important to boost capacity-building efforts: VP Naseem – Raajje

Economic growth goes hand-in-hand with increasing capacity building efforts, particularly in the aviation industry, says Vice President Faisal Naseem. VP Naseem took the podium at the event to officially inaugurate the Maldivian Aviation Academy, held at the Maldives National University (MNU) on Tuesday. Click here to read…

VP Naseem inaugurates ‘Manta Wings’ programme – Raajje

Highlighting that Manta Air has achieved a lot over the years, VP Naseem stated that the it is important to develop human resources in the field, in a bid to cater to the growing demand at a time the global airline industry is growing. Click here to read…

Maldives meets tourist arrival target for 2021 – Raajje

The country’s target for the year was 1.3 million, which was met with the arrival of Romanian national Constantin Stelian Emil on Monday. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Myanmar’s military coup redux – East Asia Forum

For the fourth time since Myanmar’s independence in 1948, the Tatmadaw (military) has reasserted its control. Click here to read…

Save the Children confirms staff killed in Myanmar massacre – Aljazeera

Save the Children has confirmed that two of its staff were killed in a Christmas Eve massacre blamed on the military that left more than 30 people dead on a highway in eastern Myanmar. Click here to read…

Reporter killed in Myanmar military attack near Thai border – RSF

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls on the international community to toughen its sanctions on Myanmar’s military junta after a journalist who was covering the plight of refugees in the southeastern state of Kayin was killed during an army artillery attack near the border with Thailand on 25 December. Click here to read…

Ethnic Armies Condemn Myanmar Junta’s Kayah Massacre – The Irrawaddy

Three allied ethnic armed organizations in Myanmar have strongly condemned the military junta’s massacre of 35 civilians in Hpruso Township, Kayah State, last week, calling the international community to bring justice. Click here to read…

Nepal
Karki counters Dahal’s document- Himalayan

A day after CPN-Maoist Centre Chair Pushpa Kamal Dahal called for ensuring identity-based federalism in his political document that he presented in the party’s eighth general convention, another party leader, Ram Karki, presented a document countering Dahal. Click here to read…

Maoist delegates find Dahal’s document lacking in clarity

As discussions start on the chairman’s political paper, many say a concrete policy and time-bound programme is needed to transform the once-revolutionary party. Click here to read…

Nepal’s first electric vehicle charging station opens- TKP

The powerhouse in Lumbini generates 154 kilowatts of electricity, making it the largest solar charging station in Nepal, officials say. Click here to read…

Farmers dismayed by govt delay in fixing this year’s floor price of sugarcane- Republica

The government has failed to fix the minimum support price of sugarcane despite the harvesting season of the farm product reaching its end for this year. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Nawaz won’t return, he will be brought back: Fawad: Dawn

Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry on Tuesday said the government would bring back self-exiled former prime minister Nawaz Sharif to the country as he would never return himself, insisting that the opposition was incapable of toppling the present setup led by the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI). Click here to read…

Tabling of mini-budget in parliament deferred: Dawn

The federal cabinet on Tuesday approved the first-ever National Security Policy (NSP) of the country but deferred approval of the supplementary finance bill [mini-budget] which was scheduled to be tabled in the National Assembly on Wednesday (today). Click here to read…

Summary to grant industry status to rice forwarded to ECC: The Express Tribune

The federal government has decided to grant industry status to rice processing mills to boost the commodity’s exports and solve other problems, sources said on Tuesday. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Lanka readies oil tank farm deal with India; Wang to visit Colombo after spat, may offer sweeteners: The Indian Express

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi will visit Sri Lanka next week in the midst of a crippling economic crisis that has seen Colombo turn to Delhi for help and fast pedal the long-delayed India-Sri Lanka plan for joint development of the Trincomalee oil tank farm. Click here to read…

Govt braces for food shortage: Daily Mirror

The government is bracing for a possible food shortage in the coming months by initiating plans to secure around US $ 100-150 million from the Central Bank a month to import essentials such as rice, sugar, chilli, dhal and wheat flour from the regional countries, a minister said. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, December 28, 2021

China releases shortened negative lists for foreign investment: Xinhuanet
December 27, 2021

China on Monday unveiled two shortened negative lists for foreign investment, as part of efforts to further open up the economy and promote high-quality economic development.
The number of items that are off-limits for foreign investors will be cut to 31 in the 2021 version of the negative list from 33 in the 2020 version, according to a statement jointly released by the National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Commerce. Click here to read…

Mega water diversion project benefits Beijing: Xinhuanet
December 27, 2021

A mega water diversion project has so far benefited more than 13 million residents in Beijing, the local water authority said Monday.The South-to-North Water Diversion Project has transferred over 7.3 billion cubic meters of water from major rivers in the south of the country to the nation’s capital over the past seven years, according to the Beijing Water Authority. Click here to read…

Military exercises to be held in Bohai Strait, Yellow Sea for two weeks: China Military
December 27, 2021

According to a notice released by China’s Dalian Maritime Safety Administration, military exercises will be performed in waters of Bohai Strait and north Yellow Sea from December 26, 2021 to January 9, 2022. Click here to read…

Historical roots strengthen China’s plan for future: China Military
December 27, 2021

There is no greater guide for the path we find ourselves on today than the road which we have already traveled. While China has increasingly become synonymous with innovation and a future-oriented outlook, the momentous milestones reached in 2021 had a single underlying theme of an entirely different nature — history. Click here to read…

China reports highest number of daily COVID cases in 20 months: Global Times
December 27, 2021

China reported 200 COVID-19 cases on Monday, with 162 domestic transmissions, the largest daily increases in almost 20 months. With concerns increasing over whether China can effectively put this round of flare-ups under control before the Beijing Winter Olympics in February, especially as the Omicron variant is causing havoc globally, analysts said that China’s dynamic zero policy and previous experience in quelling domestic outbreaks will help curb the current epidemic, and the closed-loop management of the Beijing Olympics will ensure the safety of the sports event.Click here to read…

Foreign investment banned in rare-earth sector, new negative lists show: Global Times
December 27, 2021

China’s newly released negative lists of sectors off-limits to foreign direct investment showed on Monday that overseas investors are prohibited from investing in rare-earth mining projects. Experts said that the move aims to protect and optimize domestic rare-earth resources, which are essential for many key technologies, while improving the core value of the industry chain. Click here to read…

China drafts rules to tighten management of company registrations: Reuters
December 27, 2021

China’s central bank and market regulator issued draft rules on Monday requiring companies to improve the management of their registration information, with any deferred registration filings likely to be subject to the rules. The proposals aim to improve transparency and strengthen the enforcement of anti-money laundering laws, the two regulators said in a joint-statement on their websites. Click here to read…

Hong Kong Apple Daily founder and staff face new sedition charge: Reuters
December 28, 2021

Hong Kong prosecutors on Tuesday filed a “seditious publications” charge against jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai who already faces charges under a tough national security law that critics say has stifled freedoms in the Asian financial hub. Lai, 74, the founder of the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper, appeared in court alongside six other former Apple Daily staff. The daily tabloid closed in June after authorities raided the newspaper, arrested staff on national security grounds and froze assets. Click here to read…

Nimble Chinese satellite grabs hi-res images of US city in seconds say researchers: South China Morning Post
December 28, 2021

In just 42 seconds, a small Chinese satellite captured images of a large area around a US city that would be sharp enough to identify a military vehicle on the street and tell what type of weapon it might be carrying, say scientists reporting on the breakthrough. Beijing-3, a small one-tonne commercial satellite launched by China in June performed an in-depth scan of the core area of the San Francisco Bay (3,800 square kilometres or 1,470 square miles), according to scientists involved in the project. Click here to read…

Shenzhen party boss takes over as acting governor of Guangdong province: South China Morning Post
December 27, 2021

The Communist Party chief of Chinese tech hub Shenzhen has been promoted to acting governor of Guangdong, the province’s legislature announced on Monday. Wang Weizhong, 59, takes over from Ma Xingrui. Ma was named as the new party secretary of the far western Xinjiang region on Saturday, replacing Chen Quanguo, according to state media.
Already an alternate member of the party’s policymaking Central Committee, the promotion is likely to pave the way for Wang to become a full member at next year’s national congress – a twice-a-decade event that is expected to usher in major leadership changes. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: December 28, 2021

Afghanistan
Anas Haqqani Calls on ‘Unqualified Officials’ to Step Down: Tolo News

A top member of the Islamic Emirate, Anas Haqqani, called on “unqualified officials” to step down from their positions and allow professional individuals to fill their posts. Click here to read…

High Taxes on Mining in Afghanistan Deter Investors: Tolo News

The high rate of taxes on mine extraction has affected the mining process in Afghanistan, the investors said on Sunday, adding that they are not willing to invest in mines. Click here to read…

Iran interested to meditate talks between Afghan factions: Qomi: The Khaama Press

Iran’s president special representative to Afghanistan Hassan Kazzemi Qomi said that Tehran has good relations with all factions in Afghanistan and can mediate talks between them for stability and peace in the war-torn country. Click here to read…

Afghanistan Tajikistan inked power agreement: The Khaama Press

Afghanistan’s electricity body (Da Afghanistan Breshna Sherkat) on their official Facebook page announced that they signed an agreement of power with Tajikistan for 2022. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
$500b economy by next fiscal- Daily Star

As per the finance division’s projection, the size of the Bangladesh economy would be $510 billion in fiscal 2022-23 after growing at 10.7 percent. Click here to read…

Metro Rail employee killed in Sher-e-Bangla Nagar Road accident- Daily Star

An employee of the Metro Rail project died after a bus ran him over at the capital’s Sher-e-Bangla Nagar yesterday. Click here to read…

Should we consider a bad cold as a Covid symptom?- Dhaka Tribune

Researchers, healthcare experts and physicians say catching a cold at this time may not be caused by minor allergies, which is very common in the winter. Click here to read…

‘Rising inflation hurts rural people’- Asian Age

The BBS report said the average inflation in rural areas rose to 6.20 per cent in November. At the same time, the average inflation in the city stood at 5.59 percent. Click here to read…

PM Hasina returns home- Asian Age

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina arrived in Dhaka on Monday afternoon wrapping up her maiden six-day bilateral visit to the Maldives. Click here to read…

Arms, ammo recovered from Habiganj Satchhari forest- Observer

The Counter-Terrorism and Transnational Crime Unit (CTTC) of Dhaka Metropolitan Police recovered 15 grenades, 25 boosters and 510 bullets of machineguns from Satchhari forest in Chunarughat upazila of Habiganj district on Monday. Click here to read…

Bhutan
His Majesty graces winter Parliament session- Kuensel

His Majesty The Druk Gyalpo graced the closing ceremony of the winter session of Parliament on December 25. Click here to read…

For a cleaner and beautiful Bhutan- Bhutan Times

With the inspiring words from His Majesty the King; “Tendrel for Environment,” a nationwide cleaning competition with the underlying message for a safe and healthy environment was launched. Click here to read…

A summary of Bhutan’s 114th National Day- Daily Bhutan

Every year Bhutan celebrates its most historically significant day – the National Day (Gyalyong Duechen) on 17th December. Click here to read…

Maldives
Active Covid-19 cases across Maldives rise to 2,032 – Raajje

According to the latest figures publicized by the Health Protection Agency (HPA), 132 new infections and 119 additional recoveries were reported between 6pm Saturday and 6pm Sunday. Click here to read…

EEEP will pave way to improve, deliver public services: president – Raajje

The Executive Enhancement and Enrichment Programme (EEEP) will greatly assist in the administration’s efforts to reform, improve and deliver public services, says President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih. Click here to read…

More parties in Maldives oppose ‘India Out’ campaign led by Abdulla Yameen – Hindustan Times

More political parties in the Maldives have opposed an “India Out” campaign led by former president Abdulla Yameen following his release from house arrest, saying the leader is recklessly inciting hatred among the people towards India. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Myanmar Navy commissions Type 35B Ming-class submarine – Naval Technology

Myanmar has announced the commissioning of China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy’s (PLAN) former Type 35B Ming-class submarine. Click here to read…

Myanmar Junta Court Postpones Suu Kyi Verdict for Second Time – The Irrawaddy

A junta court in Naypyitaw has again postponed giving a verdict in the trial of detained State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on two charges of the possession and illegal importation of walkie-talkies. Click here to read…

United Nations Condemns Myanmar Junta’s Massacre of Civilians – The Irrawaddy

The United Nations has called for an investigation into a massacre of displaced civilians in Kayah State, eastern Myanmar, and condemned the incident. Click here to read…

Nepal
Opinion: Nepal Begins Hydropower Export to India- The Diplomat

The Himalayan country needs Chinese investment and the Indian market to tap the full potential of its hydropower sector. Can Nepal walk the fine line? Click here to read…

‘RTI a must for promoting good governance’- Himalaya

Minister of Communications and Information Technology Gyanendra Bahadur Karki has said the Right to Information is necessary for durable peace, good governance, and development in the country. Click here to read…

Dahal proposes three-front fight for identity-based federalism- Himalaya

CPN-Maoist Centre Chair Pushpa Kamal Dahal tabled his ideological and political report in the closed session of the party’s eighth general convention. Click here to read…

Dahal’s political document leaves delegates confused- TKP

Maoist leaders struggle to get a copy, and wonder what discussions they can hold with not much time to read it. Click here to read…

Civil Aviation Authority passes budget after half-year delay- TKP

The delay in the passage of the budget could set back infrastructure development, as funds that need to be spent on projects will be held up, officials at the authority said. Click here to read…

NC to conduct convention in 16 districts by Jan 11- Republica

The Nepali Congress has decided to hold the party conventions in the remaining 16 districts by January 11. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Security policy sees economy as pivotal to stability: Dawn

The National Security Committee (NSC) on Monday approved the National Security Policy that puts economic stability at the core of a comprehensive national security. Click here to read…

Finance ministry paints rosy economic picture: The Express Tribune

According to the average Monthly Economic Indicator (MEI) report issued by the finance ministry, there is demand for Pakistani exports by the trading partners despite the spread of Omicron – the new Covid-19 variant. Click here to read…

Pakistan’s biggest fight is against ‘retrogressive’ thinking: Fawad: The Express Tribune

Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry on Monday said the biggest fight of the Pakistani state is against the “retrogressive thinking” that poses a danger to the country. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Temporary Closure of Identified Sri Lanka Missions / Posts Overseas: News.ik

The Foreign Ministry, following careful consideration, has taken a decision to temporarily close three of its Missions / Posts overseas, i.e., the Sri Lanka High Commission in Abuja, Nigeria; the Consulate General of Sri Lanka in Frankfurt, Germany; and the Consulate General of Sri Lanka in Nicosia, Cyprus; with effect from 31 December 2021. Click here to read…

Better if ministers resign before criticising collective Cabinet decisions –President: The Island

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa yesterday said it would have been better if ministers Wimal Weerawansa, Udaya Gammanpila and Vasudeva Nanayakkara had resigned as ministers before challenging a collective Cabinet decision on the Yugadanavi power plast agreement. Click here to read…