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China’s BYD prepares to launch latest SUV, the Sealion 07, in Europe despite EU tariffs

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BYD, the world’s largest electric vehicle (EV) maker, is set to launch its latest SUV, the Sealion 07, in Europe, undeterred by recent tariff increases on Chinese-made electric vehicles. This strategic move highlights BYD’s commitment to expanding overseas sales despite economic barriers.

Deliveries of the Sealion 07 are scheduled to begin in 2025, marking BYD’s seventh all-electric model in the European market, the company announced on Wednesday. Additionally, BYD plans to enter the South Korean market next year, adding to its existing presence in 95 countries worldwide.

This European expansion comes on the heels of the European Union’s decision last month to impose new tariffs—ranging from 17% to 35.3%—on Chinese electric vehicles following an anti-subsidy investigation. BYD’s EVs are subject to a 17% tariff, in addition to the standard 10% tariff applied to all pure electric cars imported from China. These tariffs, which took effect last month, will remain in place for five years. Meanwhile, U.S. tariffs on Chinese-made EVs increased from 25% to 100% as of September, citing similar concerns.

Despite the added costs, BYD’s vehicles continue to hold strong appeal in export markets. “BYD’s vehicles remain attractive even after the additional tariffs, so it’s not really a big problem for the company,” said Chen Jinzhu, CEO of Shanghai Mingliang Auto Service, a leading industry consultancy. “The Sealion 07 exemplifies how BYD’s cost advantage enables it to counteract such trade barriers in key export markets.”

Shenzhen-based BYD has yet to disclose the European pricing for the Sealion 07. On the mainland, the SUV—featuring a range of 450 kilometers—starts at 189,800 yuan (approximately US$26,272), with deliveries beginning in May.

According to a report last year from UBS analysts, BYD has a sustainable cost advantage of 25% over traditional European brands.

ASIA

Israel Aerospace Industries advances deep technology collaborations in India

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In a bid to expand globally, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), the country’s top-selling defense group, is jointly looking for start-ups in India for cutting-edge technologies in areas such as big data, signal and image processing, green energy and more.

IAI launched the NeuSPHERE Innovation Accelerator Programme in the South Asian country at the end of November.

Avital Schrift, IAI’s vice president of core technologies, told Nikkei Asia in New Delhi that the aim of the programme is to “reach out to innovative startups in the deep technology space and work with this community to take their ideas and … turn immature ideas from the world’s technologies into products”.

In addition to big data, image processing and green energy, the IAI will also focus on advanced navigation systems, artificial intelligence, and autonomy, XR (augmented reality) care and training, advanced manufacturing, quantum, edge computing, human-machine interfaces, and wearable technology.

The company works with many Indian government organizations and private companies in various fields, such as Hindustan Aeronautics and Larsen & Toubro. In September, it signed a memorandum of understanding with India’s state-owned defense company Bharat Electronics to work together to meet the short-range air defense needs of the South Asian country’s armed forces.

We are working with all the giants [in India] and … [we are also] trying to create a lot of joint ventures … We believe in cooperation with Indian companies,’ Schrift said in the interview.

IAI said the NeuSPHERE programme will provide participating Indian startups with access to advanced resources and technologies, including global mentorship and guidance, networking, and funding to accelerate their market-ready solutions.

“We have our own innovation center in Israel that has been operating for the past four years,” said Schrift, adding that when they decided to go global, they focused on only two giants: The U.S. and India. The Israeli company launched an innovation programme called IAI CATALYST in the U.S. earlier this year.

“We value Indian culture, talent and technological capabilities,” said Schrift, who has been working with Indians for 40 years.

Israeli Ambassador to New Delhi Reuven Azar told Nikkei that the IAI’s NeuSPHERE programme is ‘a very important programme because innovation plays a key role in creating the value chain in the economy’.

“Everything starts with innovation and then flows down,” he added. IAI also inaugurated its latest facility in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad on Thursday, specializing in the maintenance and repair of radar modules and subsystems such as power systems, cooling systems, information technology integration, radar testing and calibration.

The strategic center marks an important milestone in IAI’s commitment to strengthen India’s defense infrastructure under the Make in India initiative, which aims to transform the South Asian country into a manufacturing hub, IAI said in a statement.

Founded in 1953, IAI is the largest technology employer in Israel with revenues of $5 billion and 15,000 employees. It is one of the world’s top 10 aircraft design and manufacturing companies and one of the world’s top 11 satellite companies.

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A challenging environment for media activities

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The Office of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has published a report on the state of the media after the rule of the Taliban, saying that this group has created a challenging environment for the activities of the media and journalists are facing increasing challenges.

Over the past three years, UNAMA has documented the human rights violations of 336 journalists and media workers, including 256 cases of arrest and detention, 130 cases of torture and ill-treatment, and 75 cases of threats.

UNAMA has said in a statement that in this report it has documented the increasing challenges that the media and journalists are facing. Journalists and media workers operate under censorship and severe restrictions on access to information, according to the report.

According to UNAMA, female journalists and media workers in particular face more restrictions and discriminatory practices. Roza Isakovna Otunbayeva, the special representative of the UN Secretary General in Afghanistan, said: “For every country, having a free media is not only a choice, but a necessity. Journalists and media workers in Afghanistan work in difficult conditions. They often face unclear rules about what they can and cannot report, and risk intimidation and arbitrary detention for being perceived as critical.”

She asked the Taliban to guarantee the safety and security of all journalists and media workers and to recognize the importance of women’s presence in the media sector. Volker Turk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, called the findings of the UNAMA report very worrying and asked the governing authorities to coordinate their actions with Afghanistan’s obligations under international law, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Suspension of media activities in Afghanistan

According to UNAMA, the media sector in Afghanistan had grown significantly during the republic, but after August 15, 2021, a large number of media outlets have stopped their activities.

According to the UNAMA report, before the Taliban took over, there were 543 media outlets with 10,790 employees, but in November 2021, about 43pc of these media outlets ceased to operate and the number of media employees decreased to 4,360.

Meanwhile, 84pc of female media workers have lost their jobs. Currently, it is said that there are no female journalists working in some provinces. The economic problems caused by the cut off of foreign aid and income, the mass migration of journalists and the restrictions of the Taliban are considered to be the factors that stop the activities of the media.

UNAMA has noted that the Taliban have created a challenging environment for the media to operate, including censorship and lack of access to information. In addition, according to the report, journalists under Taliban rule are subjected to intimidation and threats, arbitrary arrest and detention, ill-treatment, prosecution and imprisonment for performing their duties.

Taliban restrictions on the media outlets

UNAMA has said that media activities in Afghanistan are subject to a series of restrictions – among these restrictions is the ban on the publication of music and films in which there is music and women are shown. According to this report, in media offices, men and women should work in separate offices, and male and female presenters should not appear in the same program. Also, female employees must cover their faces. Likewise, in some provinces, women are not allowed to call radio programs, unless the program is about health and religious issues for women.

UNAMA said in its report that media outlets that failed to comply with these restrictions were suspended or forced to cease operations. According to UNAMA, the law of the Taliban has intensified the restrictions on the media. The new restrictions include banning the publication of live photos and videos in the media.

With the implementation of the law of the Taliban, media video broadcasts have been stopped in some provinces, and journalists are not allowed to take pictures of living creatures. The Taliban say that they are implementing this law gradually.

Intervening in the affairs of active media outlets in exile

The UNAMA report states that after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, some media have moved their activities abroad. According to UNAMA, these media are operating in violation of the Taliban’s regulations and cannot obtain a license to operate in Afghanistan. These media are permanently exposed to Taliban intervention and suspension.

According to the UNAMA report, journalists who work for active media in exile are working in secret and are more likely to be caught and arrested arbitrarily. The UNAMA report states that the Taliban also intervened in the affairs of foreign journalists working for international media and asked them to first share their subject for review and approval. It has been said that the Taliban have told foreign journalists that the issuance of visas is subject to compliance with the guidelines of the media and respect for the “red lines”.

According to the UNAMA report, the Taliban consider reports focused on restrictions on women and girls, IS attacks, and the presence of armed groups such as al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban to be inappropriate.

The challenge of accessing information

Referring to the challenge of access to information, the UNAMA report states that the limited work environment of the media and the difficulties in accessing information have affected the accuracy of media reports and provided space for the increase of false information.

According to a survey conducted by the National Union of Afghan Journalists in September 2023, only one percent of the total of 433 journalists surveyed rated “good” access to information in Afghanistan. According to UNAMA, access to information is challenging, especially on issues considered sensitive to the Taliban, such as security incidents, protests or access to education and human rights issues.

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In Uzbekistan, murder attempt of former Uzbek press-secretary lead to a dismissal of top security official

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Shots fired in Uzbekistan. Literally and figuratively.

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev launched a series of sweeping changes in government roles in response to a murder attempt of his ally, former press-secretary and top advisor on country’s information politics Komil Allamjonov.

The head of State Security Services Abdusalom Azizov was dismissed from his position.
The current Press-secretary of the president Sherzod Asadov statement read, “Azizov has been transferred to the Secretariat of the Presidential Security Council.” Although the decision might sound pompous, de facto it signifies the end of career.

Who is Komil Allamjonov

A proponent of President Mirziyoyev’s reform agenda, Komil Allamjonov entered the ranks of high profile government officials first as a Press-secretary in 2017. A year later he moved to lead the Uzbek Agency for Press and Information which was renamed to the Agency for Information and Mass Communications (AIMC). At the time Miziyoyev assigned his daughter Saida Mirziyoyeva as Allamjonov’s deputy. Since then they worked in tandem to facilitate Mirziyoyev vision of transforming Uzbekistan. From 2020 to 2022 the two left AIMC to top the Public Foundation for Support and Development of Mass Media. Allamjonov and Mirziyoyeva’s efforts awakened nearly dead Uzbek media landscape, giving more freedom to journalists to cover a range of issues from corruption cases to domestic violence.

In July 2022 Allamjonov and Mirziyoyeva tandem elevated to the President Administration Office. The former became the head of Information policy Department.

Assassination is unheard of

If there is a country free of gun related problems, then it would be Uzbekistan. Purchasing any weapons is impossible because they are licensed to security and law enforcement agencies. Needless to say that in its modern history, the country has not

experienced any assassination attempt on a politician. So shots at Komil Allamjonov shook Uzbek politics and society.

Because of tight gun purchasing policy, assassination attempt immediately raised a reflag at security services and power struggle inside Uzbek politics. The way law enforcement agencies carried out their communication on the case hinted at internal clash.

How the assassination unfolded and who are the suspects

The incident took place on October 26 at 1:40 a.m. when Komil Allamjonov was returning to his residency in Kibray district of Tashkent region. The two masked gunmen opened fire at the victim’s Range Rover. General Prosecutor’s Office in a statement omitted Allamjonov’s name. The next day GPO captured one suspect. The day following GPO detained another three potential hitman. No names or photographs of suspects have been released.

The main suspect’s name, Javlon Yunusov, however, was silenced up until his detention in South Korea. Yunusov’s name first appeared in a profound investigation of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE). As RFE reported, despite having a criminal record, the suspect successfully run several business in Uzbekistan and South Korea through his civil marriage to Natalya Fen, a daughter of late Uzbek Ambassador to South Korea Vitaliy Fen.

Following the murder attempt, Yunusov escaped to South Korea. On November 25, Uzbek authorities announced Yunusov’s extradiction to his home country.

Another man responsible for assassination attempt, Shohrukh Akhmedov, is in custody.

Other dismissals

Abdusalom Azizov’s firing was followed by a series of other replacements. Assistant to the Prime Minister and Head of the Prime Minister’s Reception Office Sarvar Ashurov, his brother, Colonel Alijon Ashurov, Head of the Internal Security Department of the State Security Service, Akhrorjon Atkhamov, Head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Operational Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Doniyor Tashkhodjaev, First Deputy Chief of the Tashkent Police Department, and Timur Sobirov, Head of the Organized Crime Department of the Tashkent Police Department were all fired.

Uzbek state media agency “UzA” confirmed the co-relation between dismissals and Komil Allamjonov’s murder attempt.

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