logo
Macau democrat arrested for colluding with foreign forces, police say

Macau democrat arrested for colluding with foreign forces, police say

Yahoo7 days ago
By James Pomfret and Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) -A leading Macau democrat, Au Kam San, has been arrested for collusion with foreign forces to endanger national security, according to a police statement on Thursday in the China-ruled gambling hub.
Au, 68, is one of Macau's most prominent democratic campaigners who served for nearly two decades as a lawmaker.
Macau's police said in a statement that a suspect surnamed Au had been taken from his residence for investigation on Wednesday.
"The resident has allegedly been in contact with an anti-China organisation abroad since 2022, providing the group with large amounts of false and seditious information, for public exhibitions overseas and online," the statement said.
The statement added Au had also sought to incite hatred against Beijing, disrupt a 2024 election for Macau's leader and to "provoke hostile actions by foreign countries against Macau".
Au and his wife couldn't be immediately reached for comment.
Through the years, Au had championed democratic reforms and helped foster civil society initiatives in the tiny enclave that returned from Portuguese to Chinese rule in 1999 -- two years after the neighbouring former British colony of Hong Kong was handed back to China.
Unlike Hong Kong which has seen big social movements challenge Chinese Communist Party rule in 2014 and 2019, the democratic opposition in the China-ruled former Portuguese colony has always existed on the fringes amid tight Chinese control.
Macau's boom into one of the world's biggest gambling hubs, with gaming receipts exceeding Las Vegas, has also been tainted by public corruption cases involving senior officials such as Ao Man Long and Ho Chio Meng.
Through the years, Au had led protests and railed against opaque governance and rising social inequalities even as gambling revenues exploded in the city of around 680,000.
Au was one of the founders of several pro-democracy groups including the New Macau Association, and had worked as a schoolteacher.
This move in Macau comes as authorities in neighbouring Hong Kong continue to crackdown on dissent under two sets of powerful national security laws that have been used to jail activists, shutter media outlets and civil society groups.
While Hong Kong's democrats had actively challenged Beijing's attempts to ratchet up control of the city since its return to Chinese rule, Macau's government has faced far less public scrutiny, with authorities able to enact a sweeping set of national security laws as early as 2009.
This law was amended in 2023, to bring it in line with similar laws in Hong Kong and China and to bolster the prevention of foreign interference.
(Additional reporting by Farah Master; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Michael Perry)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China says trade jumped in July, beating forecasts
China says trade jumped in July, beating forecasts

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

China says trade jumped in July, beating forecasts

China's exports beat expectations and rose 7.2 percent year-on-year in July, official data showed Thursday, as overseas shipments buoyed its struggling economy even as it navigated a shaky trade war truce with the United States. The two economic superpowers agreed in Stockholm last month to hold further talks on extending the tariff truce. That deal has temporarily set fresh US duties on Chinese goods at 30 percent, while Beijing's levies on US goods stand at 10 percent. The accord -- initially agreed in Geneva in May -- brought down triple-digit tariffs each side had imposed on the other after Donald Trump launched his "Liberation Day" levies on April 2. The 90-day truce is set to end on August 12, when the original duties could snap back. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said following the Stockholm talks that Trump would have the "final say" on any extension of a tariffs truce between Washington and Beijing. Higher tariffs on dozens of trading partners -- including a blistering 35 percent on Canada -- came into force Thursday as Trump seeks to reshape global trade to benefit the US economy. He has also threatened to impose 100 percent tariffs on semiconductor imports. Thursday's data showing an increase in China's overseas shipments last month outpaced a Bloomberg forecast of 5.6 percent. But the figures also showed that China's exports to the United States, its largest trading partner, continued to fall, sinking 6.1 percent from the previous month. And imports -- a key gauge of struggling domestic demand -- jumped 4.1 percent year-on-year in July, compared with a Bloomberg forecast of a one-percent fall. Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said the data showed "exports supported the economy strongly so far this year". "Export growth may slow in coming months, as the front loading of exports due to US tariffs fades away," he said. "The big question is how much China's exports will slow and how it would spill over to the rest of the economy," he said. Beijing has said an official goal of around five percent growth this year. But it has struggled to maintain a strong economic recovery from the pandemic, as it fights a debt crisis in its massive property sector, chronically low consumption and elevated youth unemployment. Factory output shrank more than expected in July, data showed last week. pfc-oho/tym Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

China Seeks Reduction in Pig Breeding Herds to Ease Oversupply
China Seeks Reduction in Pig Breeding Herds to Ease Oversupply

Bloomberg

time38 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

China Seeks Reduction in Pig Breeding Herds to Ease Oversupply

China is urging top pig farmers to scale back breeding herds by about 2%, the latest push to tackle oversupply in the country's food sector, which has sparked concerns over deflation. Farmers' representatives are expected to gather next week to discuss effective ways to shrink sow herds by 1 million, along with other measures to rein in pork production, China's state-backed official husbandry association said in a notice.

Trump vows more secondary sanctions for Russia oil buyers are coming, including potentially on China
Trump vows more secondary sanctions for Russia oil buyers are coming, including potentially on China

CNN

time38 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump vows more secondary sanctions for Russia oil buyers are coming, including potentially on China

Donald Trump Russia Asia China FacebookTweetLink US President Donald Trump warned Wednesday that more punishment was coming for countries buying Russian energy products after slapping a 25% tariff on India that is supposed to go into effect Thursday. 'You're going to see a lot more. So this is a taste,' he said in the Oval Office. 'You're going to see a lot more. You're going to see so much secondary sanctions.' The move is part of Trump's high-stakes effort to cripple Russia's economy over its war in Ukraine. He had set a Friday deadline for Russian President Vladimir Putin to make peace before imposing that economic punishment. Previous rounds of US sanctions, including under Trump's predecessor Joe Biden, knocked Russia's economy but have not stopped Putin's war machine. The strategy marks an escalation in Trump's use of tariffs, his signature second-term weapon. He has previously used them to pursue a sprawling agenda, from protecting US manufacturing to pressuring foreign governments on policy. These 'secondary tariffs,' however, are being used to force third-party nations into a choice: sever ties with a US adversary or risk further penalties. While Trump voiced optimism about progress made during a meeting Wednesday between Putin and US envoy Steve Witkoff, he suggested it wasn't enough to stave off the new sanctions. The top purchaser of Russian energy is China, with which Trump is working to negotiate a new trade deal. US officials have described significant progress on those talks. But Trump did not rule out applying the new secondary sanctions on Beijing, despite the potential for scuttling the trade discussions. 'One of them could be China,' he said. 'It may happen. I don't know. I can't tell you yet.' China previously said it will 'take energy supply measures that are right for China based in our national interests.' 'Tariff wars have no winners,' foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said during a news briefing last week. 'Coercion and pressuring cannot solve problems. China will firmly safeguard its own sovereignty, security and development interests.' The US and China are still working to extend a trade truce that held back triple-digit tariffs, which is set to expire on August 12. China's exports accelerated before that looming deadline, beating expectations to grow 7.2% in July from a year earlier – a faster pace than June's 5.8%. Trump's secondary tariff threats have escalated tensions between Washington and another of its most important trading partners. The US president announced sweeping and substantial tariffs on India Wednesday, making the penalties imposed on the world's fifth-largest economy among the highest the US charges. In addition to a 25% tariff set to go into effect Thursday, Trump also announced a 25% tariff on India that will go into effect later this month as punishment for importing Russian oil and gas. India responded to Trump's tariff escalation, defending its purchases of Russian oil. 'We have already made clear our position on these issues, including the fact that our imports are based on market factors and done with the overall objective of ensuring the energy security of 1.4 billion people of India,' a statement from India's Ministry of External Affairs said. 'It is therefore extremely unfortunate that the US should choose to impose additional tariffs on India for actions that several other countries are also taking in their own national interest.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store