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China eases tourist visa restrictions to boost economy

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China has extended its visa-free travel policy to six more countries, including Switzerland and Ireland, as of Thursday. It was noted that the move is aimed at increasing tourism and people-to-people exchanges to the country.

This latest decision comes as China lifts visa requirements for citizens of more countries, including those in Southeast Asia, and moves to resolve other issues, including payment barriers for foreign visitors.

Chinese experts say the move underlines the country’s determination to open up. Experts also said that at a time when many major countries, such as the United States, are tightening visa policies for Chinese citizens, China’s series of opening-up moves underscore the country’s confidence and openness, which is conducive to an open global economy, in stark contrast to the isolationist and protectionist trend rising in some countries.

According to the latest development, from Thursday to 30 November 2024, citizens of six European countries (Switzerland, Ireland, Hungary, Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg) will be able to visit China for up to 15 days for business, travel, transit and other purposes without having to apply for a visa.

The first direct flight out of Brussels

Visa-free travel policies for these six countries have already been announced. Airlines and travel agencies are making preparations, such as increasing the number of flights between China and these countries.

On Thursday, the first direct flight between South China’s Guangdong region and six European countries took off for Shenzhen after the visa-free policy officially took effect. The flight, which departed from Brussels, Belgium, and was operated by Hainan Airlines, carried more than 20 Belgian citizens.

Anticipating an increase in passenger numbers, Hainan Airlines told the Global Times on Thursday that it currently operates two direct flights to Brussels, with the Beijing-Brussels flight operating daily and the Shenzhen-Brussels flight operating three times a week.

Meanwhile, searches for flights from Europe to China have also increased. Chinese online travel platform Qunar.com reported that searches for flights from Zurich to China were up 60 per cent on Thursday afternoon compared to last week.

Overall, some routes between China and European countries showed a growth trend after the visa-free policy came into effect on Thursday, according to aviation information provider VariFlight.

“This may indicate that the visa-free travel policy will promote tourism and business exchanges between the two sides and further strengthen China-Europe relations,” VariFlight told the Global Times.

Aiming to increase tourism

In December 2023, China abolished visa requirements for citizens of six countries, including five European countries such as France and Germany.

China has also recently signed reciprocal visa exemption agreements with Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand.

In addition to visa exemptions, China has taken a number of other measures to make visits by foreigners more convenient, including streamlining visa applications and improving payment services. Due to problems with the acceptance of foreign bank cards and identity verification procedures, many foreign visitors have encountered difficulties in using China’s mobile payment services, the most widely used payment method in China. As a result, the Chinese authorities have taken several steps to address these issues.

Last week, China’s cabinet, the State Council, issued a notice calling on banks and payment and clearing organisations to strengthen cooperation to continuously improve and expand mobile payment services for foreign visitors. On Thursday, the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, issued a guide to payment services in China, saying foreign visitors now have a range of payment options, including mobile payments.

According to the Financial Times, 35 million foreigners travelled to and from China last year, a third of the nearly 98 million expected in 2019. State media estimated that the epidemic cost China $362 billion in lost international tourism revenue between 2020 and the end of last year.

Beyond the impact on the tourism industry, authorities are concerned that the decline in foreign visitors threatens to further isolate China and contribute to negative perceptions of the country abroad.

Part of externalisation

The measures, aimed at boosting inbound travel and people-to-people exchanges, are part of China’s sustained and comprehensive opening-up drive and reflect the country’s openness and confidence at a time when many countries are turning inward, experts said.

“These visa-free policies are actually a manifestation of China’s stance of promoting people-to-people exchanges, supporting economic globalisation and opposing trade protectionism,” Bian Yongzu, a senior researcher at the Chongyang Institute of Financial Studies at Renmin University of China, told the Global Times.

“We are dealing with this period of uncertainty with a mindset of greater openness and trust,” Bian said, noting that some countries are trying to block economic and people-to-people exchanges between nations under the pretext of national security, causing great uncertainty for the global economy.

“There are indeed some protectionist tendencies in Europe and the US,” Bian said, adding that some of these countries are facing deep domestic challenges and do not have appropriate solutions to overcome these challenges, so they resort to putting pressure on developing countries.

Bian said the visa facilitation move would also “help foreign governments better understand China’s economic development and be more willing to cooperate with China”.

ASIA

China launches $138bn bond sale

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China will start selling the first batch of 1 trillion yuan ($138 billion) of ultra-long term private government bonds on Friday to help revive the economy.

The central government will begin such sales this year by issuing 30-year bonds, according to a statement from the Ministry of Finance. According to Bloomberg, this ends months of speculation about when the bonds, only the fourth of their kind in 26 years, will be launched after a sweeping plan was announced in March.

According to the report, President Xi Jinping’s government is stepping up financial support to help an economy under pressure from the housing crisis and weak consumer confidence. Government spending on infrastructure, which can be financed through bonds, will play a key role in helping China achieve its annual growth target of around 5 per cent, above economists’ forecasts.

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group’s Xing Zhaopeng said the increase in gross domestic product could be as much as 1 percentage point.

“The timing of the bond issue is likely aimed at offsetting the impact of protectionist tariffs the US has threatened to impose on Chinese goods,” Zhaopeng said, noting the uncertainty ahead of a Communist Party meeting on reforms in July.

The 20-year and 50-year bonds will be sold on 24 May and 14 June respectively. Bond auctions will continue until the last batch of 30-year bonds goes on sale in November. The ministry did not disclose the amount of bonds to be sold.

Bloomberg announced the private government bond sale on Monday. The issue will include 300 billion yuan of 20-year bonds, 600 billion yuan of 30-year bonds and 100 billion yuan of 50-year bonds, according to people familiar with the matter, who requested anonymity because the information is private.

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ASIA

US, Australia, Japan and Philippines plan more naval exercises to counter Beijing’s influence

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The defence chiefs of the United States, Japan, Australia and the Philippines have announced plans to hold more naval exercises as they seek to increase cooperation against China.

The officials met at the US Marine Corps base Camp H.M. Smith in Hawaii for a series of bilateral and joint talks.

The meeting is part of US efforts to increase cooperation among its allies to counter Beijing’s influence in the region.

The quadrilateral talks come less than a year after the first quadrilateral meeting between the countries’ defence chiefs on the sidelines of the Asian security forum known as the Shangri-La Dialogue.

As tensions rise in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea, where the four countries’ militaries conducted their first joint patrols in April, the countries are strengthening defence ties by focusing on maritime cooperation. This week, the US and the Philippines conducted live-fire exercises in the disputed waters, while four Chinese ships fired water cannon at a Philippine vessel for violating territorial waters.

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, who hosted the meeting, said at the joint press conference that the four countries wanted to “conduct more naval exercises and activities” to improve the interoperability of their forces.

Austin criticised China’s recent actions as “irresponsible behaviour” that “flouts international law” and recalled the mutual defence treaty with the Philippines: “I can only say that you have heard me and the President say many times that our commitment to the treaty is unwavering.”

Similarly, Philippine Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. called the discussion of hypothetical scenarios “unproductive”. He said the quadrilateral meeting was about sending a common message in the face of a “unilateral declaration by a single actor”.

Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles said his counterparts discussed the “increased tempo” of defence exercises in the face of global challenges to the “rules-based order”.

Japanese Defence Minister Minoru Kihara said the Mutual Access Agreement (RAA) negotiated with the Philippines will strengthen bilateral relations and help advance maritime cooperation among the four countries.

“We are united in strongly opposing any attempt to unilaterally change the status quo in the South China Sea through the use of force or any activity that would raise tensions in the region,” he said.

The bilateral meeting between Kihara and Austin followed a summit between US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Washington in April. The two sides also announced plans to hold a “2+2” meeting between their leaders and senior defence officials.

The defence ministers of the US, Japan and Australia also held their 13th trilateral defence ministers’ meeting and signed an agreement on defence science and technology cooperation.

Containment strategy

Beijing believes that Washington, through its allies in the region, is pursuing a strategy of containment of China and raising tensions in the Asia-Pacific.

In a speech last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping described the United States as “the power behind the containment, encirclement and suppression” of China. The Biden administration denies this.

Financial Times columnist Edward Luce, who was also a speechwriter for US Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers during the Clinton administration, had previously taken up this containment debate.

Luce stated that the US policy of containment of China is now very obvious as follows: “The original idea of containment, set out in George Kennan’s 1947 Foreign Affairs article, was more modest than the undeclared containment that is now US policy.”

“Kennan’s advice was twofold: Stop the expansion of the Soviet empire; and promote Western democracy,” Luce wrote, describing the US approach to China today as “a higher level of containment”.

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ASIA

Daesh claims gun attack killing seven worshippers in Afghan mosque

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The Daesh terrorist group has claimed responsibility for a gun attack on a minority Shiite mosque in western Afghanistan that killed seven people, including women and a kid.

The gunman stormed Imam Zaman mosque in Guzara district of Herat province and opened fire on worshippers as they were praying. Taliban Interior Ministry spokesman, Abdul Mateen Qani said that they have launched an investigation on the shooting. The Imam of the mosque was among those killed and the attacker fled the scene. Police in coordination with the defense forces are chasing the Daesh shooter.

I strongly condemn the attack on the Imam Zaman mosque, former Afghan president Hamid Karzai said on X. I consider this terrorist act to be against all religious and human standards. I have expressed my deepest condolences to the families of the victims of this tragic incident,” he furthered.

Unfortunately, once again, a number of our dear compatriots were martyred and a number of others were injured in a terrorist attack on the worshipers of the Imam Zaman mosque, said Dr. Abdullah Abdullah, former head of high peace council.

Daesh targeted defenseless worshippers

“While I consider the cowardly attack on our defenseless countrymen to be against Islamic and humanitarian standards, I pray for the martyrs and wish rapid recovery for the wounded.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) also condemned the attack, calling for urgent protection measures for the country’s Shia communities.

UNAMA had reported  that at least seven people, including a child were killed in the attack.

Victims of of the deadly Imam Zaman Mosque attack in Herat were laid to rest.

The agency stressed the need for “investigations, accountability for perpetrators, and enhanced protection measures for Afghanistan’s Shia communities.”

Richard Bennett, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan said that violence against Shia Hazara worshippers must be stopped.

All Afghans must be able to pray in peace

“I condemn the killing of Shia Hazara worshippers at a mosque in Guzara, Herat. All Afghans must be able to pray in peace. I urge prevention, protection and justice for Hazara/Shia who continue to be targeted, including in Herat. Condolences to the families and community,” he said.

Countries like Turkey, Iran, Japan, and other regional countries also condemned the attack and assured to stand beside the Afghans in their fight against any sort of terrorist groups.

Daesh, or the Islamic State (IS) is considered as one of the biggest rivals of the Taliban as they frequently target schools, mosques, shrines, hospitals, public places, religious gatherings and sacred sites of the Shiite Muslims and Shiite areas throughout the country.

Shiitte mosque attack in Herat is caused to create fear among Hazara people

A female Hazara in a video message to Haraci, said that the recent Daesh attack on the Shiite mosque in Herat has created fear and panic among Hazaras and Shiites. She added that instead of condemning, the international community should act to prevent such attacks in the future.

Daesh has intensified deadly attacks against innocent Afghans since August 2021 when the Taliban seized power following the chaotic departure of the foreign troops from Afghanistan after 20 years.

Despite the Taliban claiming that they have maintained security, Daesh was able to carry several deadly attacks, even targeting high-ranking Taliban officials inside their offices.

Daesh killed Balkh governor inside his office, while three other Daesh bombers exploded their suicide vest among a gathering of people during funeral ceremony. Daesh had also shown capability to attack foreign missions in Kabul. Daesh claimed responsibility for the attack on Pakistan and Russian embassies in Kabul. Daesh also attacked a Kabul hotel famous for Chinese guests.

The Taliban has pledged to protect religious and ethnic minorities, but rights monitors say the Taliban are doing little to make good on those promises.

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