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  • This content originally appeared on The Real News Network and was authored by The Real News Network.

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  • Several Chinese social media users have shared what appears to be a BBC news report alongside a claim that the BBC reported China’s spaceship “abused aliens” on the moon. 

    But the claim is false. The screenshot shared on social media has been digitally altered. Keyword searches found no credible reports to back the claim.

    The claim was shared on China’s Weibo social media platform on June 30. 

    “BBC said the Chinese spaceship abused aliens on the moon,” reads the claim. 

    The claim was shared alongside a screenshot of what appears to be a BBC report. 

    “BBC report: Chinese Spaceship Abusing Aliens on the Moon,” text in English superimposed on the screenshot reads. 

    The claim started spreading online after China’s robotic lunar mission, Chang’e 6, returned to Earth on June 25. It became the first lunar mission to collect samples from the far side of the moon.

    The same screenshot with similar claims were shared on Weibo here and here as well as on X, formerly known as Twitter, here and here

    1 (3).png
    Several Chinese influencers claimed that the BBC had deliberately released a ridiculous report about the Chang’e lunar mission. (Screenshots /X and Weibo)

    But the claim is false. 

    The BBC report

    A reverse image search of the screenshot found the matching scene included in this BBC report on June 25, titled “China space probe returns to Earth with rare Moon rocks.” 

    A close look at the four-minute and 22-second report found no parts that back the claim.

    2 (1).png
    The original BBC report was unrelated to aliens. (Screenshot /BBC official YouTube channel)

    Keyword searches also found no credible reports that show the BBC reported China’s spaceship “abusing aliens” on the moon. 

    Translated by Shen Ke. Edited by Shen Ke and Taejun Kang.

    Asia Fact Check Lab (AFCL) was established to counter disinformation in today’s complex media environment. We publish fact-checks, media-watches and in-depth reports that aim to sharpen and deepen our readers’ understanding of current affairs and public issues. If you like our content, you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram and X.


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  • Wang Shujun is 76. A Chinese American scholar, he says he loves the U.S. and has dedicated the last thirty years of his life to advocating for democracy in China from his adopted home of Flushing, New York. The FBI says he was living a double life and is actually a spy for Beijing.

    Is he an American patriot caught up in a game he doesn’t understand — or an agent for a foreign government living a double life?

    Discover the truth in RFA’s thrilling 5-episode podcast series, “Master of Deceit,” launching July 20. 

    Read more in RFA’s exclusive special report, “Historian. Activist. Spy? For years an American academic pushed for democracy in his native China. The FBI claims it was a front.”


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    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By Tara McKelvey and Jane Tang for RFA Investigative.

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  • ANALYSIS

    He is the notorious playboy cousin of Cambodia’s prime minister, and has long been viewed as the family’s fixer for all things they would rather not come into public view. 

    Hun To has reportedly been investigated by Australian police for heroin trafficking; faced questions in connection to threats against the family of slain political analyst Kem Ley, which fled to Australia in 2016 and; in recent years, reporting by Al Jazeera and The Australian newspaper has tied him to cyber slavery, scam compounds and drug smuggling.  

    But in bringing lawsuits against those news organizations, he inadvertently highlighted how Australia – a key regional partner for Cambodia – is running out of patience for the Hun dynasty’s antics. 

    Earlier this month, Hun To scored an apparent victory after he secured an out-of-court settlement over a years-long dispute with The Australian.

    The outlet agreed to retract a 2-year-old story it had published about Hun To that “some readers may have understood” to have alleged that he “was linked to human trafficking, cyber scams and drug importation,” the paper wrote. 

    The Australian did not intend to make any such allegations against Mr Hun and accepts his denials of such conduct.”

    The retraction marked the conclusion of a defamation case Hun To had brought against The Australian in December 2022. It came just after the Australian government had declined to renew his visa, RFA has learned – even though he had spent decades living part-time in the country and he and his family owned extensive business and property interests around Melbourne. 

    While Canberra gave no reason for its decision, Hun To’s lawyers insisted in court complaints seen by RFA that the rejection was spurred by news stories from The Australian and Al Jazeera linking him to organized crime, fraud factories and human trafficking in his native Cambodia. 

    A case launched in parallel by Hun To against Al Jazeera is ongoing. The Qatari state-funded outlet did not respond to a request for comment.

    Australian libel law is notoriously plaintiff-friendly, particularly in cases where the defendant is a news organization. This growing reputation led the author of a 2019 New York Times op-ed to dub the island nation “the defamation capital of the world.” 

    In Australian defamation cases, the burden of proof uniquely rests with the defendants. No other type of case places such burden on the party being sued.

    In such a legal environment, defendants run higher risks of losing and incurring hefty damages, and that has often encouraged news organizations to settle out of court.

    The retraction might have gone little noticed until Hun To’s lawyer, Adam Lopez – who has been known for taking on controversial defamation cases – took to LinkedIn to gloat about his victory. The dispute with The Australian had been “resolved on a confidential basis,” he noted, suggesting that the newspaper had made further concessions beyond the retraction. 

    Cambodia press and social media users quickly picked up the story, with some simply reporting on the retraction and others criticizing The Australian or the Australian court system.  

    With the scrubbing of the controversial story, Hun To enjoyed precisely one day of victory. 

    On July 10, news broke suggesting Hun To’s business interests were neck deep in exactly the type of allegations for which The Australian had just apologized. Elliptic, a financial compliance firm specializing in tracing cryptocurrencies, published a report alleging that a “Cambodian conglomerate with links to Cambodia’s ruling Hun family” had laundered more than US$11 billion for cyber scammers. The name of the company was Huione Pay, and Hun To is one of its three directors. 

    A subsequent report by Reuters found evidence that Huione Pay had processed cryptocurrency worth $150,000 that had been stolen by the sanctioned North Korean hacking collective known as Lazarus. In response to the allegations, National Bank of Cambodia, the country’s central bank, told Reuters that it “would not hesitate to impose any corrective measures” on Huione, although it said so “without saying if such action was planned,” the news agency drily noted.

    Following the revelations, digital finance company Tether announced that it had frozen $29 million of cryptocurrency held by Huione following a “a direct request from law enforcement.”

    Whether the latest news make Hun To reconsider going after the press, however, seems unlikely, said Phil Robertson, director of Asia Human Rights and Labor Advocates. 

    Hun To “would be wise to abandon his case since all the dirt has come out on Huione, but he won’t because he’s a shameless, arrogant, rights-abusing tycoon who believes that whatever he does, the ruling Hun family will have his back.”

    Neither Huione’s nor Hun To’s lawyer had responded to requests for comment as of publication.

    These allegations are far from the first time Hun To has caught negative publicity. Australian MP Julian Hill spoke in Parliament last March arguing that Hun To and other politically connected Cambodian figures “should never again be granted visas to visit Australia.” 

    His speech charted Hun To’s long and checkered links to Australia, noting that as early as 2003 Australian police had sought to arrest him on suspicion of heroin trafficking. Since then, Hun To and his wife acquired millions of dollars’ worth of property in Australia, Hill added, “with seemingly no legitimate explanation for where their wealth has come from.”

    “It’s no secret that Hun To has his finger in lots of pies — drug trafficking, illegal deforestation, animal trafficking, illegal gambling,” Hill said. “Most recently, we’ve heard reports he’s dipping his toes into human trafficking, as well. That’s diversifying, isn’t it?”


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  • Comprehensive coverage of the day’s news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice.

    Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks at a Get Out The Vote rally at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, S.C., Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

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  • Seg4 guest amy trumpspeech split

    The Washington Post reports the word “abortion” was not mentioned a single time from the stage during the first three days of the Republican National Convention. Reporter Amy Littlefield, abortion access correspondent at The Nation, says the silence from Trump and others at this week’s RNC in Milwaukee does not reflect a change in attitude from the Republican Party, which is still fiercely opposed to reproductive rights. “Republicans can read the polls. They know that abortion has triumphed in all seven instances where it’s been on the ballot since the Dobbs decision. They know that a rising number of people support abortion rights,” says Littlefield, who predicts that “abortion is going to have a huge impact on this election” and calls for “a Reproductive Justice New Deal.”


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  • New York, July 19, 2024—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns as outrageous a Russian judge’s decision on Friday to jail U.S. reporter Evan Gershkovich for 16 years on fabricated espionage charges. 

    “Russia’s decision to jail Evan Gershkovich for 16 years on sham charges is outrageous,” said CPJ Program Director Carlos Martinez de la Serna. “Journalists are not pawns in geopolitical games. It’s time to stop hostage diplomacy and free him immediately.”

    Gershkovich’s closed-door trial started on June 26 in the Sverdlovsk Regional Court in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg. A second hearing took place on July 18, when the court announced that it had completed its judicial investigation. The next day, the court heard arguments from both sides, and a judge handed down an 16-year prison term against the journalist.

    Gershkovich, a reporter with The Wall Street Journal, has been jailed in Russia since the country’s Federal Security Service (FSB) arrested him on espionage charges on March 29, 2023, while he was on a reporting trip in Yekaterinburg. A June 2024 indictment accused Gershkovich of collecting “secret information” for the CIA on a Russian tank factory in the Sverdlovsk region. The journalist, his outlet, and the U.S. government have all denied the accusations and the U.S. State Department has designated him “wrongfully detained.”   

    “He did nothing wrong. Russian authorities have failed to present evidence of a crime or justify Evan’s continued detention,” the U.S. Embassy in Russia said in statement on Thursday.

    “This disgraceful, sham conviction comes after Evan has spent 478 days in prison, wrongfully detained, away from his family and friends, prevented from reporting, all for doing his job as a journalist,” said Almar Latour, CEO of Dow Jones and publisher of The Wall Street Journal, and Emma Tucker, editor in chief of the publication, in a statement on Friday.

    Russia was the world’s fourth-worst jailer of journalists, with at least 22 behind bars, including Gershkovich and Alsu Kurmasheva, a U.S.-Russian journalist, when CPJ conducted its most recent prison census on December 1, 2023.

    (Editor’s note: This report has been updated since its initial publication.)


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Arlene Getz/CPJ Editorial Director.

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  • As delegates arrived at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee earlier this week to officially nominate former president Donald Trump as their 2024 candidate, a right-wing policy think tank held an all-day event nearby. The Heritage Foundation, a key sponsor of the convention and a group that has been influencing Republican presidential policy since the 1980s, gathered its supporters to tout Project 2025, a 900-plus-page policy blueprint that seeks to fundamentally restructure the federal government. 

    Dozens of conservative groups contributed to Project 2025, which recommends changes that would touch every aspect of American life and transform federal agencies — from the Department of Defense to the Department of Interior to the Federal Reserve. Although it has largely garnered attention for its proposed crackdowns on human rights and individual liberties, the blueprint would also undermine the country’s extensive network of environmental and climate policies and alter the future of American fossil fuel production, climate action, and environmental justice. 

    Under President Joe Biden’s direction, the majority of the federal government’s vast system of departments, agencies, and commissions have belatedly undertaken the arduous task of incorporating climate change into their operations and procedures. Two summers ago, Biden also signed the Inflation Reduction Act, the biggest climate spending law in U.S. history with the potential to help drive greenhouse gas emissions down 42 percent below 2005 levels. 

    President Biden signs the Inflation Reduction Act into law. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    Project 2025 seeks to undo much of that progress by slashing funding for government programs across the board, weakening federal oversight and policymaking capabilities, rolling back legislation passed during Biden’s first term, and eliminating career personnel. The policy changes it suggests — which include executive orders that Trump could implement single-handedly, regulatory changes by federal agencies, and legislation that would require congressional approval — would make it extremely difficult for the United States to fulfill the climate goals it has committed to under the 2015 Paris Agreement

    “It’s real bad,” said David Willett, senior vice president of communications for the environmental advocacy group the League of Environmental Voters. “This is a real plan, by people who have been in the government, for how to systematically take over, take away rights and freedoms, and dismantle the government in service of private industry.”  

    Trump has sought to distance himself from the blueprint. “Some of the things they’re saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal,” he wrote in a social media post last week

    However, at least 140 people who worked in the Trump administration contributed to Project 2025, and policy experts and environmental advocates fear Project 2025 will play an influential role in shaping GOP policy if Trump is reelected in November. Some of the blueprint’s recommendations are echoed in the Republican National Convention’s official party platform, and Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts says he is “good friends” with Trump’s new running mate, Senator J.D. Vance from Ohio. Previous Heritage Foundation roadmaps have successfully dictated presidential agendas; 64 percent of the policy recommendations the foundation put out in 2016 had been implemented or considered under Trump one year into his term. The Heritage Foundation declined to provide a comment for this story.  

    A large, blue sign with the words "Heritage welcomes you to the RNC Convention in MKE" on it hangs between two pillars at the Milwaukee airport.
    A Heritage Foundation welcome sign for the Republican National Convention at the Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

    Broadly speaking, Project 2025 proposals aim to scale down the federal government and empower states. The document calls for “unleashing all of America’s energy resources” by eliminating federal restrictions on fossil fuel drilling on public lands, curtailing federal investments in renewable energy technologies, and easing environmental permitting restrictions and procedures for new fossil fuel projects such as power plants. “What’s been designed here is a project that ensures a fossil fuel agenda, both in the literal and figurative sense,” said Craig Segall, the vice president of the climate-oriented political advocacy group Evergreen Action. 

    Within the Department of Energy, offices dedicated to clean energy research and implementation would be eliminated, and energy efficiency guidelines and requirements for household appliances would be scrapped. The environmental oversight capacities of the Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency would be curbed significantly or eliminated altogether, preventing these agencies from tracking methane emissions, managing environmental pollutants and chemicals, and conducting climate change research. 

    In addition to these major overhauls, Project 2025 advocates for getting rid of smaller and lesser-known federal programs and statutes that safeguard public health and environmental justice. It recommends eliminating the Endangerment Finding — the legal mechanism that requires the EPA to curb emissions and air pollutants from vehicles and power plants, among other industries, under the Clean Air Act. It also recommends axing government efforts to assess the social cost of carbon, or the damage each additional ton of carbon emitted causes. And it seeks to prevent agencies from assessing the “co-benefits,” or the knock-on positive health impacts, of their policies, such as better air quality. 

    “When you think about who is going to be hit the hardest by pollution, whether it’s conventional air water and soil pollution or climate change, it is very often low-income communities and communities of color,” said Rachel Cleetus, the policy director with the climate and energy program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit science advocacy organization. “The undercutting of these kinds of protections is going to have a disproportionate impact on these very same communities.” 

    Aerial view of refineries and storage tanks near homes in Louisiana's Cancer Alley
    Chemical plants and factories line the roads and suburbs of the area known as “Cancer Alley” in Louisiana. Giles Clarke / Getty Images

    Other proposals would wreak havoc on the nation’s ability to prepare for and respond to climate disasters. Project 2025 suggests eliminating the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Weather Service housed therein and replacing those organizations with private companies. The blueprint appears to leave the National Hurricane Center intact, saying the data it collects should be “presented neutrally, without adjustments intended to support any one side in the climate debate.” But the National Hurricane Center pulls much of its data from the National Weather Service, as do most other private weather service companies, and eliminating public weather data could devastate Americans’ access to accurate weather forecasts. “It’s preposterous,” said Rob Moore, a policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Action Fund. “There’s no problem that’s getting addressed with this solution, this is a solution in search of some problem.” 

    The document also advocates moving the Federal Emergency Management Administration, or FEMA, which marshals federal disaster response, out from under the umbrella of the Department of Homeland Security, where it has been housed for more than 20 years, and into the Department of the Interior or the Department of Transportation. “All of the agencies within the Department of Interior are federal land management agencies that own lots of land and manage those resources on behalf of the federal government,” Moore said. “Why would you put FEMA there? I can’t even fathom why that is a starting point.” 

    The blueprint recommends eliminating the National Flood Insurance Program and moving flood insurance to private insurers. That notion skates right over the fact that the federal program was initially established because private insurers found that it was economically unfeasible to insure the nation’s flood-prone homes — long before climate change began wreaking havoc on the insurance market. 

    Despite the alarming implications of most of Project 2025’s climate-related proposals, it also recommends a small number of policies that climate experts said are worth considering. Its authors call for shifting the costs of natural disasters from the federal government to states. That’s not a bad conversation to have, Moore pointed out. “I think there’s people within FEMA who feel the same way,” he said. The federal government currently shoulders at least 75 percent of the costs of national disaster recovery, paving the way for development and rebuilding in risky areas. “You are disincentivizing states and local governments from making wise decisions about where and house to build because they know the federal government is going to pick up the tab for whatever mistake they make,” Moore said.  

    Debris and wreckage lay across the ground show a place all but destroyed by a hurricane
    The remnants of a neighborhood lie scattered by Hurricane Laura outside of Lake Charles, Louisiana. Photo by Stringer / AFP via Getty Images

    Quillan Robinson, a senior advisor with ConservAmerica who has worked with Republicans in Washington D.C. on crafting emissions policies, was heartened by the authors’ call for an end to what they termed “unfair bias against the nuclear industry.” Nuclear energy is a reliable source of carbon-free energy, but it has been plagued by security and public health concerns, as well as staunch opposition from some environmental activists. “We know it’s a crucial technology for decarbonization,” Robinson said, noting that there’s growing bipartisan interest in the energy source among lawmakers in Congress. 

    An analysis conducted by the United Kingdom-based Carbon Brief found that a Trump presidency would lead to 400 billion metric tons of additional emissions in the U.S. by 2030 — the emissions output of the European Union and Japan combined.

    Above all else, Segall, from Evergreen Action, is worried about the effect Project 2025 would have on the personnel who make up the federal government. Much of the way the administrative state works is safeguarded in the minds of career staff who pass their knowledge on to the next cadre of federal workers. When this institutional knowledge is curbed, as it was by budget cuts and hostile management during Trump’s first term, the government loses crucial information that helps it run. The personnel “scatter,” he said, disrupts bottomline operations and grinds the government to a halt. 

    Although Project 2025’s proposals are radical, Segall said that its effect on public servants would echo a pattern that has been playing out for decades. “This is a common theme in Republican administrations dating back to Presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan,” he said. “What you do is you break the government, make it very hard for the government to function, and then you loudly announce that the government can’t do anything.”

    This story was originally published by Grist with the headline What Project 2025 would to do climate policy in the US on Jul 19, 2024.


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  • Few issues are more freighted than the U.S.-Israel relationship. Overwhelmingly, Democrats and Republicans give Israel “unwavering” support. Internationally, it’s a different story. Opposition to the U.S.-Israel alliance is mounting, particularly on Palestine. Nowhere is this more apparent than at the UN where scores of U.S. Security Council vetoes shield Israel from criticism. Can policy change? Noam Chomsky says, “It’s very much in our hands. There are plenty of things we can do to compel the U.S. to join the world on this issue.” If that happens, he concludes, “the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can certainly be mitigated, not solved, but set on a basis of a much more favorable outcome.” Recorded at UCLA.


    This content originally appeared on AlternativeRadio and was authored by info@alternativeradio.org.

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  • Hernán González, a producer for the South American broadcaster Torneos, was forced to the ground and handcuffed by multiple law enforcement officers at a stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, while reporting live before a soccer match on July 14, 2024.

    The New York Times reported that mayhem broke out at the Copa América final between Argentina and Colombia, when throngs of unticketed fans attempted to enter Hard Rock Stadium in the Miami suburb, delaying kickoff for more than an hour.

    In footage captured by Mail Sport reporter Jake Fenner, officers from multiple law enforcement agencies can be seen grabbing a man who appears to be holding press credentials and who entered through the media entrance, according to Fenner.

    The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker was able to confirm the man was González, who is the content and production director for Torneos, which produced and was a host broadcaster of the event.

    In the video, González is quickly surrounded by at least six officers, who lift him sideways and place him prone on the ground, with an officer appearing to hold his head against the pavement while others place him in handcuffs. Both of the journalist’s shoes came off and his shirt ripped open in the course of the detention.

    In additional footage published by Argentine newspaper Clarín, an officer appears to examine González’s credentials before placing them back around his neck.

    The officers appeared to be predominantly from the Miami-Dade and Miami Gardens police departments, but the more than 800 law enforcement officers present at the event were from eight different agencies, according to the Miami-Dade Police Department.

    An MDPD spokesperson told the Tracker that many similar detentions and ejections took place throughout the day, but was unable to provide more information about González’s detention.

    “Given the circumstances regarding that day, many people were detained, ejected, arrested and even unarrested in some cases, meaning that they were detained then — depending on the circumstances in which they were detained — they may have been released,” the public information officer said. “We’re attempting to be as transparent as possible with this incident, but there were a lot of individuals who just lacked judgment that day.”

    No charges had been filed against González as of July 18, according to court records reviewed by the Tracker. González did not respond to a request for comment.


    This content originally appeared on U.S. Press Freedom Tracker: Incident Database and was authored by U.S. Press Freedom Tracker: Incident Database.

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  • In the West, he may be best known for eating a gold-covered steak while his countrymen survive on an average of about US$10 a day.

    But in Hanoi, Vietnam’s new top leader To Lam has for years been seen as an operator whose decades in politics long paved the way for his ascent.

    On Thursday, that climb reached a new zenith after Vietnamese state media announced that Lam, 67, would take over the duties for Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong.

    It comes less than two months after Lam was elevated to the Vietnamese presidency – a move that put him in pole position for the general secretary job, the most powerful in the country.

    Vietnamese President To Lam attends a press briefing with Russian President Vladimir Putin (not pictured), at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam, June 20, 2024. (Minh Hoang/Pool via Reuters)
    Vietnamese President To Lam attends a press briefing with Russian President Vladimir Putin (not pictured), at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam, June 20, 2024. (Minh Hoang/Pool via Reuters)

    The son of a Vietnamese police colonel, Lam began his career in public security in 1979. He joined the Communist Party of Vietnam in 1981, eventually rising to become the minister for public security – the country’s top security official – in 2016. 

    In 2019, he was awarded the rank of general by then-president Trong.

    Security czar

    In his capacity as security minister, he focused on internal politics and counter-intelligence – areas that may well have helped him to later cement his political powers.

    The stint was not without controversy. In 2017, Lam was accused of being involved in the kidnapping of Trinh Xuan Thanh, a fugitive oil executive and former provincial official, in Berlin. 

    Thanh later returned to Hanoi through Slovakia. The government denied kidnapping but the case led to a temporary rift in diplomatic relations between Germany and Vietnam. 

    But it would fit a larger pattern of alleged transnational repression and quashing of dissent overseen by Lam. 

    His term as security minister saw the arrests and suspected kidnappings of journalist critics, including RFA blogger Truong Duy Nhat, who disappeared in Thailand in 2019 but is now in jail in Vietnam serving a 10-year sentence.

    Golden steak and ‘Onion Bae’

    In 2021, Lam was involved in another controversy after he was caught on video eating a piece of gold-plated steak at a luxury restaurant in London. 

    A video clip of the general being fed a US$2,000 steak by celebrity chef Salt Bae went viral, causing a public outcry at home. 

    This was followed by a draconian crackdown, including the arrest and jailing of a noodle-seller nicknamed “Onion Bae” who had dared to ridicule Lam by posting a parody of the incident to social media. He remains in jail.

    Lam subsequently ramped up anti-corruption crackdowns that saw off potential rivals within the party in what critics have said were clearly politically motivated investigations.

    ENG_VIET_ToLamProfile_003.jpg
    Vietnamese President To Lam, left on red carpet, and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, right on red carpet, review the guard of honor at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam, June 20, 2024. (Minh Hoang/AP)

    Lam’s enthusiastic implementation of this so-called “Burning Furnace” campaign led to the sacking of half a dozen senior ministers and Politburo members within the span of months beginning in 2022.

    Yet Lam and Trong, the ally he succeeds, are also said to have questionable hidden interests.

    In May, the Tiếng Dân newspaper revealed that a younger brother of To Lam, To Dung, was the chairman of the construction and real estate firm Xuan Cau Group, noting that the company had been conspicuously absent from any investigation even as it has won projects worth billions of Vietnamese dong with little oversight. 

    Private man

    Little else is known about the private life of Vietnam’s new top man. 

    He does not appear to have ever given any remarks to Western media and nothing in English has been written of his immediate family, though Vietnamese reports say he has been twice married, first to Vu Hong Loan, the sister of a Vietnamese police major general and currently to Ngo Phuong Ly. 

    He appears to have several children. One daughter was revealed to have graduated from London’s prestigious School of Oriental and Asian Studies, or SOAS, in 2023. 

    On the global stage, Lam has made clear his endorsement of the so-called “Bamboo diplomacy” Hanoi has undertaken to balance its relations between East and West. 

    In June, he welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin, weeks after his swearing in as president, calling him “comrade” and hailing a successful visit. 

    Hanoi saw visits from Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden within the previous nine months.

    Whether his caretaker role becomes a more permanent one, there seems little likelihood that Lam would veer from the established path. At his presidential swearing-in in May, he promised to “continue to strengthen the party’s capabilities, its ruling power and combat prowess.”

    He may well be looking to strengthen the same in himself. 

    Edited by Malcolm Foster.


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  • The ruling Chinese Communist Party on Thursday published a communique from its third plenum that analysts said was long on slogans dear to General Secretary Xi Jinping and short on practical measures to boost the flagging economy – despite promises of reinvigorating reforms in state media reports.

    While state media has been at pains to laud party leader Xi Jinping as a “reformer” in the mold of late supreme leader Deng Xiaoping, the communique from the third plenary session of the party’s Central Committee, which ended in Beijing on Thursday, offered scant details on specific reforms. 

    Instead, it threw its support behind a litany of political jargon favored by Xi, headlining its role as “seeking progress while maintaining stability.”

    The communique vowed to “continue to strengthen propaganda, ideological and cultural work” while “resolutely safeguarding national and social stability.”

    Economic recovery appeared further down the list, under the “comprehensive and strict governance of the party.”

    The document also announced the expulsion of former Foreign Minister Qin Gang and other disgraced officials from high-ranking party posts.

    In a possible indicator of the direction of any “reforms,” the communique also vowed to improve the party’s grasp of Marxist economics, including improved handling of the relationship between the forces of production and the “economic base” of the general population. 

    It also said it would improve its “macroeconomic governance,” suggesting that Xi’s administration will forge ahead with its top-down, government-directed approach to economic management, at the expense of the market forces that were given freer rein under the reforms of Deng Xiaoping.

    The party should “better maintain market order, make up for market failures and smooth the circulation of the national economy,” particularly when it comes to developing China’s own scientific and technological capabilities, the document said.

    ‘Old slogans and empty words’

    Veteran journalist Zhang Shuang said she was disappointed by the lack of content in the 5,000-character statement.

    “The communique did not contain any inspiring news, which was in stark contrast to the propaganda and praises of reforms in the run up to the meeting and while it was going on,” Zhang said. “It was just filled with old slogans and empty words.”

    “The only thing that was clear was that Qin Gang remains a party member,” Zhang said.

    ENG_CHN_THIRD PLENUM_07182024.2.jpg
    Members of the Politburo Standing Committee from left, , Li Xi, Cai Qi, Zhao Leji, Xi Jinping, Li Qiang, Wang Huning and Ding Xuexiang attend the third plenary session of the 20th Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee in Beijing, July 18, 2024. (Xie Huanchi/Xinhua via AP)

    The plenum decided to accept Qin’s resignation and remove him from his position as member of the Central Committee, the communique said. But it stopped short of expelling him from party ranks entirely.

    It also accepted a report from the Central Military Commission, the party’s military wing, on the “serious violations of discipline and law” by former Defense Minister Li Shangfu and former People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force chiefs Li Yuchao and Sun Jinming. 

    It “confirmed the previous decision of the Politburo to expel Li Shangfu, Li Yuchao and Sun Jinming from the Party.”

    Du Wen, a former legal adviser to the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region government, agreed that there was nothing new in the communique.

    “There are no highlights or specific measures,” Du said, adding that the main thrust of the document appears to be strengthening the power of Xi and the Communist Party.

    “It covers a wide range of issues, but they are all empty words and cliches,” he said. “It lacks specific measures, good policies and any clear direction.”

    Spinning its wheels?

    The plenum communique did mention “reforms of the taxation system,” an item predicted by economic analysts, as well as improvements to the healthcare and “population management” systems, but gave no details.

    The party’s absolute control over the People’s Liberation Army also got a special mention, as well as the modernization of its armed forces and joint combat capabilities, it said.

    Diplomatically, the government looks set to keep going with its attempts to export China’s authoritarian model of government as part of Xi’s slogan, “a shared future for mankind,” as well as its growing role in international organizations, according to the communique.

    “The plenary session called on the entire party, the entire army and people of all ethnic groups across the country to unite more closely around the Party Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping at its core,” it said, as part of the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.”

    Tung Li-wen, an advisor to Taiwan ThinkTank, said the communique suggests that the party leadership is “spinning its wheels.”

    “Is national security more important, or is economic development?” Tung said. “This old question is holding the Chinese Communist Party back, making its policy-making wavering and inconsistent.”

    Changing course

    Tung said that during the third plenum of the 18th Central Committee in 2013, Xi had claimed that the market would play a decisive role in resource allocation, and vowed to expand economic reforms and opening-up, but had yet to deliver on those promises.

    “Centralized control and decentralization are two different kinds of reform,” he said. “Clearly, Xi Jinping has chosen the path of centralized control.”

    Ming Chu-cheng, professor emeritus of political science at National Taiwan University, agreed, saying that the use of the word “reform” by state media under Xi actually means the opposite of what it once meant under Deng Xiaoping.

    “If you think reform means streamlining the government and decentralizing power to stimulate the economy, then of course it wouldn’t make sense,” Ming said. 

    “[Xi] believes that those kinds of reforms were wrong, and were a dangerous thing that caused the Chinese Communist Party to lose control of society, and to lose power,” he said. “Now, he’s taking that power and control back into his own hands, which is what he calls true reform.”

    Translated by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Malcolm Foster.


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