NYT latest on AIDS in China contains minor shocker

Chinese City Emerges As Model in AIDS Fight

Here in mountainous southwestern China, where heroin begat AIDS and AIDS begat death, discrimination and official denial, Gejiu is emerging as a model of how China is trying to reverse its once abysmal record on AIDS. In the last 18 months, China’s top leaders have made AIDS a national priority and introduced a host of policies, some contentious even by Western standards.

Not too long ago China denied it had an AIDS problem and tried to cover up a tainted blood-selling program that infected untold thousands of farmers. Even now, the police in some cities still arrest and harass advocates for AIDS patients or try to conceal the presence of the disease.

But places like Gejiu are starting to carry out the central government’s new policies, including needle exchanges and making condoms available in hotel rooms. And the Health Ministry is planning a nationwide expansion. China now has 8 methadone clinics but wants to reach up to 5,000 by 2010.

This article in the New York Times is in general a fairly interesting but not exactly shocking piece-except for this one quote towards the end. My emphasis added.

Another immediate challenge for the central government is the limited availability of antiretroviral drugs. Many patients cannot tolerate the regimen offered in the free drug program, but the government does not yet have another regimen. Negotiations are under way with pharmaceutical companies, but China has resisted any steps that might infringe upon patent law.

Let me show you that last bit again.

China has resisted any steps that might infringe upon patent law

My god. Can it possibly be true that the Chinese government has finally caved to the international IP lobby?

Assorted news updates

Jenkins’ hometown reacts with rage, indifference to visit

“I would have liked to have seen him lined up and shot like a traitor. I don’t care how old he is. He still did it,” said Vera Outland, who had considered lining Main Street with protest signs for Jenkins’ return.

In the end, she decided he wasn’t worth the trouble.

“If you ask me, he was a coward,” said retired U.S. Army Col. Earl Daniels, who went to school with Jenkins and served a combat tour in Vietnam. “I hope I don’t meet him on the street, tell you the truth, because I don’t know how I would react.”

Not exactly the reception that Jenkins has been getting in Japan.

For Chinese, Peasant Revolt Is Rare Victory
I had mentioned when it first happened, back during the anti-Japan protests, but the Washington Post has a very good, long article on it. Well worth reading.

Khmer Rouge trial to get more funds

PHNOM PENH (Kyodo) Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura said Japan is prepared to cover the $11 million shortfall in funds for a tribunal to bring former Khmer Rouge leaders to justice, Cambodian government sources said.

In a meeting Friday with Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, Machimura said Cambodia could use an already allocated Japanese grant to meet the shortfall, according to a senior official who attended the meeting.

Rightists thwart Yasukuni rally by Taiwanese

A group of indigenous Taiwanese gave up an attempt Tuesday to stage a rally at Yasukuni Shrine because they didn’t want to clash with rightists.

They had hoped to protest Yasukuni’s enshrinement of their relatives who died fighting for Japan in the war.

About 50 descendents or relatives led by indigenous legislator Kao Chin Su-mei arrived near the shrine in central Tokyo in the morning on two buses. They decided to scrub the protest after police told them the shrine was surrounded by 100 rightwingers, Kao Chin said.
[…]
Up to 150 officers, including riot police, were mobilized to prevent a confrontation between the two sides.

It’s pretty sad that the rightwingers managed to drive off the protesters after coming all the way from Taiwan. According to a Taipei Times report right-wingers had been threatening the aboriginal protesters before they even left Taiwan.

May Chin said last week her office had received “countless phone calls” warning her group against making the trip.

She said she had also been sent an anonymous postcard which threatened in Mandarin: “I will wait for you in Japan on June 13 so that you can come to Japan and return lifeless to Taiwan.”

You might think that 150 police officers may sound like adequate protection, but I wouldn’t count on Japanese police to keep me safe from anything.

Xinjiang Put Out Big Old Fire from Qing Times

Xinjiang Put Out Big Old Fire from Qing Times
An old big fire rampaged since the Qing times (1644-1911) on Mt. Xiaohuang, a coal-field in Xinjiang, has been lately completely put out, and up to now all the five major fire areas in the place have been stamped out.

Xinjiang is richly endowed with coal resources, but it has become in turn a place long plagued by most serious coal-field fires known to the world, with over 10m tons of coal being senselessly burnt away every year.

Under the direction of late Premier Zhou Enlai, a special fire-fighting center was set up in 1958. By now, altogether 17 big fires have been entirely eliminated in the region.

Henry Kissinger doesn’t know Chinese history (or maybe just lies about it)

I’ve seen a few blogs point to this new opinion piece by Henry Kissinger, where he conclusively proves that he has absolutely no knowledge of history, and is willing to spout whatever fiction he needs to make his point.

His basic argument is quite simple, that we should stop worrying about China. They are in no way a potential threat, militarily or economically, and people who bring up the possibility of conflict with China are just misguided. Here is some of his logic.

China’s emerging role is often compared to that of imperial Germany at the beginning of the last century, the implication being that a strategic confrontation is inevitable and the United States had best prepare for it. That assumption is as dangerous as it is wrong. Military imperialism is not the Chinese style. China seeks its objectives by careful study, patience and the accumulation of nuances.

It is also unwise to apply to China the policy of military containment of the cold war. The Soviet Union was the heir of an imperialist tradition. The Chinese state in its present dimensions has existed substantially for 2,000 years.

Ok, let’s consider his claim for a second. The comparison is amazingly easy to make. Here is a map of China’s Han dynasty, which lasted from 206 BC to 220AD, contrasted with the modern borders of the Chinese and Mongolian states. For those weak at arithmetic I will point out that 2000 years ago is smack in the middle of this period.

han dynasty china

So how do the borders line up? It seems to me that China is about twice as big now as it was then. Let’s note some of the territories controlled the People’s Republic of China that were not part of the Han Dynasty. Well, missing from the map of Han I see:
Tibet
Xinjiang
Manchuria
Mongolia (inner and outer)

And there are also a number of areas that we could consider China proper that weren’t part of the Han state, particilarly the provinces north of the Great Wall, as well as a large region in the south-west near-oh, and of course Taiwan itself!

Oh, but according to Kissinger:

ll major countries have recognized China’s claim that Taiwan is part of China. So have seven American presidents of both parties, none more emphatically than President George W. Bush.

Yes of course. Thank you for the correction. Let’s look at the most recent public statement President Bush has made about Taiwan.

When asked in an interview with the Fox News TV Channel, “Do we [the US] still stand by an agreement, Mr. President, that if Taiwan is ever invaded, we will come to the defense of Taiwan?” Bush said: “Yes, we do. It’s called the Taiwan Relations Act.”

Let’s look at another example of brilliance from Mister Kissinger.

America needs to understand that a hectoring tone evokes in China memories of imperialist condescension and is not appropriate in dealing with a country that has managed 4,000 years of uninterrupted self-government.

Oh yes, China’s 4000 years of uninterrupted self-government. That would include such self-government as the:
Liao Dynasty 907-1125 established in what later became Mongolia by the Khitan tribal leader Abaoji. Liao’s territory included a great deal of Chinese land and people south of the Great Wall region (ancient the Wall itself had crumbled at this point-the modern one was built several centuries later to replace the ancient Han dynasty structure)

Jin Dynasty (1115-1234)-an empire ruled by the Jurchen people, who invaded from the northeast and conquered the entire northern half of the Song dynasty

Ok, so neither Jin nor Liao actually took over all of China, you may be thinking. Well, out of the three final dynasties that ruled China before the Republic of China finally defeated the old Imperial state, twoof them were governments ruled by foreign invaders!


Yuan Dynasty (1271 to 1368)
– aka the Mongolian empire. Genghis Khan (Timüjin)begins the conquest of north China, and his grandson Kublia Khan finally finishes the job, making the vast Chinese empire only a part of the vast Mongol empire. Under Mongol rule, ethnic Chinese (often called ‘Han’ in memory of their glorious ancient empire) were legally second class citizens in every level of society.

After the Yuan government in China collapsed native Chinese rule was restored by the Ming.

In 1616 the descendants of the earlier Jurchens, who had recently renamed themselves the Manchu tribe, invaded part of north China and established a dynasty called the Later Jin, which in 1636 became the Qing dynasty, that like the earlier Yuan was a so-called conquest What is meant by this term is a dynasty in which an invading minority establishes control over territory, much like colonialists throughout the recent pre-modern history of most of the world.

So why exactly does Kissinger use utterly false information about Chinese history to make his argument? Well, he does admit

Before continuing on this subject, I must point out that the consulting company I chair advises clients with business interests around the world, including China. Also, in early May, I spent a week in China, much of it as a guest of the government.

at least he isn’t concealing his interests. If he had any subtlety about him then his BS might just be a little less transparent.

Thanks to Danwei for pointing out the article.

【和訳】北朝鮮に関する米政府の最近の発言 Just because: Stuff American officials have said about North Korea (Japanese ONLY)

If you care about this stuff, go to the White House (boring and patriotic), State Dept. (elegant and easy to navigate), and Defense Dept. (slick and expensive-looking) websites. It’s all there in English.

ブッシュ大統領
5月31日の記者会見にて

Q:イラク戦争の前にあなたは「イラク戦争は他の国のWMD開発の抑止となる」と言っていたが、実際はイランや北朝鮮では何の抑止にもなっていないじゃないか。

A:北朝鮮は2000年以前にも隠れた兵器プログラムを持っていた。我々は北朝鮮と2カ国協約を結んでいたが、北朝鮮はそれを破った。それで、私は政策を変えて、北朝鮮が核開発プログラムを廃止するように他の国の参加を呼びかけた。
中国が「責任のある国家であれば、兵器プログラムを廃止しろ」と我々と同じことを言っていることが重要だ。 日本、韓国、ロシアも同じことを言っていることも重要だ。
北朝鮮の件で問題が山積みであるがやめるわけではないし、責任のある国家として扱って欲しいなら、参加している5カ国を聞かなければならないとはっきり分からせることに努力を続けるつもりだ。

Q: 今朝あなたは北朝鮮を扱うのに外交がベストな手法だと言っていたが、失礼だけど、「外交は何の成果を果たしておらず、むしろ北朝鮮核開発を進歩させたじゃないか」と言う人がいる。
A: はい。
Q How do you — what do you say to them? そういう人にたいしてどう言い返すか。
A: さて、考えよう。もし外交が間違った方法であれば、次は軍事だ。それは私の考え方、外交か軍事かだ。私は外交に賛成である。だから、あらゆる提案は検討中だが、外交で解決する機会がある。

チェイニー
先週:チェニー「金正日は無責任」とののしったことに対して、北朝鮮の報道はCHENEYのことを「血に飢えた獣性」と言い返した。

ライス国務大臣

5月26日・BLOOMBERGとのインタビューにて

Q:アメリカと中国にとって今年でもっとも重要な成果とは何か。

A: 色々な面で米中関係が強くなったので、全体的に米中関係は強くなっている。江沢民の完全なる引退をゆえに実力を固めた胡錦涛大統領はとてもいい関係を確立している。北朝鮮の核問題で協力と調整を維持している。未だに解決されていないが、アメリカと中国が、特に北朝鮮と近隣国家である中国が受ける大変なプレッシャーを受けているにもかかわらず、外交を通じて「非核の朝鮮半島」に関して継続的に取り組んでいることはかなりの成果だと思う。
対テロの面でも協力を強くなっており、ほぼなんでも正直に、そして露骨に話せるような関係を作った。

Q:中国が6カ国協議において役立っていると言っているが、中国は米国が(北朝鮮と)もっと実質的な2カ国協議を行って欲しいと言明している。なぜアメリカは2カ国協議をしないか。

A: それは、既にその道で1994年に協約を結んだが、違う手段で核開発を図ってそれをすぐ破ったからだ。
アメリカは北朝鮮と2カ国協議を行うと、NKがケチを言って米朝間の問題にすることができる。しかし、米朝間の問題ではない。地域はどんな形になるのかや、核を持った北朝鮮は朝鮮半島に存在するのかという問題で、それは日本、韓国、中国、ロシア、それからアメリカの安保にとってどんな意味を持つかという問題だ。
6カ国協議の本当の成果は何かというと、いまだに北朝鮮問題を解決していないが、核を持った北朝鮮はアメリカの問題だけじゃなく、北朝鮮の近隣国全部にとって問題であることをハッキリさせたことだと思う。その枠組みを維持しなければならない。我々は(北朝鮮と)はなしている。コミュニケーション目的(交渉目的じゃない)でニューヨークを通じて(北朝鮮と)はなしている。6カ国協議の形でも話している。北朝鮮と話すことが怖いわけではない。ただ、その会話がどんな形を取るかという問題だから、その形が米朝の二カ国関係についてであれば、話すことはあまりない。

Q:この5年で核技術を拡大してきたのにかかわらず、それに対する罰は極めて軽かった。そのまま続けないと思わせる理由はあるか。

A: 罰は軽かったとは思わない。機会費用ならいっぱい費やしているに違いない。1999,2000,2001年には、ロシアと拡張的な関係について協議があった。ルーチンは北朝鮮を訪れた。日本と外交正常化についても協議があった。南北対話も大きく進歩していた。我々も2002年に北朝鮮に対して「大胆なアプローチ」という政策を準備していた。それはリビアに対するアプローチとよく似ており、アメリカや地域全体にももっと改善した関係への道でもっと正常的な関係につながるはずだった。

ラムスフェルド防衛大臣
6月4日・International Institute for Strategic Studiesにて

Shangri-La Hotel, Singapore, Saturday, June 4, 2005.

世界で最も自由と圧制の違いがはっきりと現れているところは朝鮮半島と言えよう。
私は「夜で見る朝鮮半島」の衛星写真を机の上に飾っている。DMZの下、南の半分にはほとんど光に覆われている。それは電力、活発している経済、それから生き生きしている民主主義のある国家を意味している。そして、DMZの北をご覧になれば、ピョンヤンのわずかな光を除いて暗闇しか見えない。北でも南でも同じ国民で、同じ資源を持っている。その違いは自由だ。政治的自由と経済的自由。
現場に行けばその対象がさらにハッキリして、意味深いである。大韓民国は自由な国民と自由な市場における活力(DYNAMISM)の一例である。
比較すると、北朝鮮におけるスターリン主義政権を考えてみてください。あそこでは:
反体制の人の子供や孫が強制労働をさせられる
逃れた難民が外国から拉致される、それから
飢餓に遭っている国民が一粒のご飯を見つけるために荒地を探す。

北朝鮮で数ヶ月子供の医療をしていた欧州の医者はこう言った。「北朝鮮では二つの世界がある。ひとつは軍事高官・高層の人たちの世界と、もう1つはそれ以外の人たちのための生き地獄。
北朝鮮の「核の野望」は地域の安保・安定の脅威となり、拡散の前科からみれば世界の脅威ともなる。ブッシュ大統領や後の4カ国の首脳は6カ国協議に戻るよう促している。
それから、アメリカは近隣国の成長を支援してきた開放性と自由を抱くよう促している。
北朝鮮が6カ国協議に戻るのに大きな役割を果たせる国家といえば、その国は中国である。
アメリカや多くの国々は外交、経済、世界の安保など多くの場面で中国と協力したい。多くの国々は平和的で豊かで自由な地域という目標を促進させるようなアジア太平洋構造作りに賛成的である。他国間の取り組みは重要である。中国はその協力に大きな役割を果たせる。

Post Computex Photo gallery. Part 2 – Girls (and gawkers)

Continuing from part 1 (gear) of my Computex photo gallery/a>, here are a few sample thumbnails. Or just browse the album directly.

Anyone who has ever been to, or read about, any kind of large trade show related in any way to the computer technology field will be familiar with the show models or ‘booth babes’ hired by major presenters to lure attendees to their booth, where they can have their arms filled up with brochures and worthless branded knick-knacks. While for most attendees, the booth-babes may only be a pleasant distraction from the more serious business of checking out the new hardware, there is a serious contingent of people who are there just to check out, and photograph the dancing, scantily clad, attractive girls.

As good looking as most of the girls are, most of them are surrounded by so many excessively eager, desperate, camera-bearing men that you can’t just stand there and enjoy the show, except in some of the smaller out of the way booths. Larger, more popular booths such as Shuttle or Nvidia were just so hideously jam-packed that seeing the models up close would require about as much effort as pushing your way through a moshpit to the front row of an overcrowded rock show.

After seeing the ridiculous effort that these photographers exert to attend each little dance number and photograph the models at each company’s stall, I realized that the photographers themselves were just as amusing as the models, and decided to present a photogallery interleaving portraits of the photographers with the photographed. For the ideal presentation, start with this first model photo and view the rest sequentially within the gallery.


Click here for an obsessively complete photo gallery of models from this year’s Computex, as well as past computer trade shows..

Where’s the Niurou?

The Asahi reported today that as of June 1st, Yoshinoya resumed sales of gyudon at all 45 of its stores in Taiwan. This is the first time Taiwanese gyudon lovers have been able to buy the bowls in one year and four months since Yoshinoya halted sales last February following the Taiwanese ban on U.S. beef imports. Taiwan reopened imports in April, but only for cattle under 30 months of age.

According to the article, the price is some 20 percent higher than before sales were halted, but this apparently hasn’t stopped large numbers of visiting Japanese businessmen from frequenting Yoshinoya outlets.

Since MFT founding contributor Roy is in Taiwan this summer, and in keeping with the challenge issued by Adamu last week, and Curzon and Joe‘s intrepid trek to consume coffee flavored ramen, perhaps Roy might be willing to visit and give an eyewitness account. Five points for every photo you get of a Japanese salaryman chowing down on gyudon! And ten for any still beating hearts you find in the bowl!

Post Computex Photo gallery. Part 1 – Gear

There are a lot of candidates for the center of the world’s IT industry: Cupertino, Redmond, Palo Alto, Tokyo, Seoul, – but these days it seems to be Taipei.

The definitive expression here is DIY, widely known in English speaking countries as an acronym for Do It Yourself, but here in Taiwan adopted as a uniquely specific lexical item referring just to the homebrew computer industry. If you walk into any of the many, many, many expansive computer stores in Taipei you will be overwhelmed by a selection of parts unavaliable at all but the rarest of US computer stores, and more interesting struck by the odd lack of brand name desktop systems.

“Here in Taiwan, if you can’t make your own PC you’re not a man,” I was told earlier today by a Taiwanese guy named Kevin. This is a sentiment that I can imagine evoking a kind of cultural jealousy in hardware geeks throughout the entire planet.

This little number from Foxconn has the distinction of being one of the coolest and best looking PC case designs I have seen. They also have the fine distinction of having provided one of the exhibitor ID tags that was used to sneak me into the show.

On Sunday I had the pleasure of attending Computex, Taiwan’s trademark computer and technology expo, the largest in Asia and the second largest of its type in the world after Hannover, Germany.

Of course I took a number of photos, and here is a sample of them. I have divided photos into two parts: Gear and Girls, since as everyone knows the motivation for attendance at these tech industry shows is based almost equally on both of those things.


Some of the literally hundreds of case designs on display.


This is exactly what we’ve all wanted for all these years! Screw laptops, next time I buy a portable I want something that looks like Q cobbled it together.


This isn’t an ipod shuffle, but an unreleased prototype product of the socalled iVogue mp3 player line from Jetway. They estimated a July release date, but the website doesn’t even have a listing for these products yet, much less pricing information.


Easily the most impressive piece of actual new technology I saw at the show. This is an experimental prototype CPU cooling system, from Korean manufacturer KM Korea. The demo had a chip of some kind running at about 50 celsius, quite hot to the touch. You press the button and it activates their cooling device, and the heat instantly drains away from the chip surface, cooling it to about 15 celsius in only a couple of seconds. I have no idea how it works, and where the heat is being dissipated to. Perhaps the table concealed some kind of wormhole, through which the heat is sent into whatever dark dimension in which Cthulhu waits.

Pagishikinda! Pagishikinda!

Outpost Gallifrey reports:

“Pagishikinda! Pagishikinda! Now the Daleks take on Doctor Who in Korea. In the first deal of its kind, BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the BBC, has concluded a contract with Korea’s biggest public television station, KBS, for the smash hit BBC One series, Doctor Who.

This is the first time a UK drama series has been sold to a Korean public station, and KBS will launch Doctor Who on KBS 2 in a primetime, two-hour slot on Sunday 5 June. Viewers will be introduced to ‘Dacter Who’ (Doctor Who), his companion Rose, and enemy, the Daleks, who blast, ‘Pagishikinda!’ (‘Exterminate!’). KBS will broadcast two episodes per week, and the series will be dubbed for the Korean audience.

Russell T. Davies, writer and executive producer of Doctor Who said, ‘The Doctor has travelled far and wide and knows no boundary and now the programme is doing much the same! We are delighted that Korea has embraced this wonderful adventure.’

Jungwon Lee, Executive Director, KBS Media, said: ‘We are very excited to launch Doctor Who on our network. For the first time in a primetime weekend slot, we are bringing the latest hit BBC drama to our Korean audience and anticipate a great reaction from all age groups.’

Linfield Ng, Korea and Taiwan Territory Manager, BBC Worldwide (Asia) added: ‘We are delighted that one of Asia’s largest public broadcasters, KBS, is supporting one of the most recognised BBC brands. We thank KBS for being so ambitious in launching Doctor Who in such a great time slot.'”

Doctor Who has been my favorite television program since I was about eight years old, and I can’t wait to hear what Daleks sound like dubbed into Korean. Still though, I find it infuriating that the Doctor will be shown on Korean TV while no American station has yet decided to purchase airing rights to the series. It was reported that Scifi channel turned it down before the premiere of the new Doctor Who series, which after having seen the ten episodes so far I find utterly unfathomable. The show is fantastic, and has had some of the highest viewer ratings and media reviews in UK television history, and they had better be kicking themselves hard for having passed it up.