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China tells citizens in Israel to 'stay highly alert' after strikes on Iran

China tells citizens in Israel to 'stay highly alert' after strikes on Iran

The Stara day ago

A damaged building is seen after an explosion in a residence compound following Israel's attack on Iran's capital Teheran on June 13, 2025. - AP
BEIJING: China's embassy in Tel Aviv warned citizens in Israel on Friday (June 13) to "stay highly alert" and exercise caution, after the country launched deadly attacks on Iran.
"The Chinese Embassy in Israel strongly reminds Chinese citizens in the country to closely monitor developments, remain calm, and stay highly alert," the embassy said on WeChat.
"Do not go out unless necessary, and strictly avoid areas around military installations and sensitive institutions," it added. - AFP

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China's top baijiu maker faces sobering reality as austerity trims profits
China's top baijiu maker faces sobering reality as austerity trims profits

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

China's top baijiu maker faces sobering reality as austerity trims profits

China's premier liquor distiller Kweichow Moutai – a brand that had, over decades, become synonymous with sumptuous feasts – is heeding a renewed mandate for austerity from Beijing, distancing its products from the extravagant hard-drinking lifestyle with which it had been linked in the public consciousness. Management at the company, valued at 1.86 trillion yuan (US$258.73 billion), has pledged to comply with strictures stressing thrift – guidelines that have helped to remove Moutai's expensive baijiu liquor from government banquets and narrowed the firm's profit margin further. Senior executives vowed to remain vigilant against the risks of corruption at a company meeting on Tuesday, where Moutai chairman Zhang Deqin invoked classic Chinese texts to argue the liquor must promote culture, health and harmony. 'With the baijiu , rites and traditions are upheld, the aged are nourished and joy is shared,' Zhang said, citing the Book of Rites and the Classic of Poetry, both of which date back centuries. Moutai's notoriously strong liquor – around 50 per cent alcohol by volume – has been the drink of choice for China's officials and executives since the early years of the Communist Party. After revolutionary leaders Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai developed a taste for the spirit during their time in the southwestern province of Guizhou, the distinct white bottles have been given as official gifts to visiting dignitaries and become a fixture at lavish dinners. Zhang's remarks followed a March revival of orders to curtail inordinate expenditures on dining, showy official junkets and other entertainment. Most notably, President Xi Jinping has reiterated an eight-point code of conduct - first released in 2012 - to ensure officials do not hold costly receptions at the public's expense. As an SOE it must toe the party line on austerity, even at the cost of its sales The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party's top anti-corruption organ, has republished up to 80 detailed rules related to the topic, including a ban on party and government dinners and meetings held at popular visitor attractions. 'Working meals should serve ordinary dishes in a home-cooking style. High-end dishes should be avoided, along with cigarettes and high-end liquor,' reads one rule. Moutai's leaders are likely to feel more pressure than most to demonstrate their fealty to official directives. Within the last decade, company chairmen Yuan Renguo and Gao Weidong were given separate prison sentences for bribery; Yuan, placed under investigation in 2019, died of a cerebral haemorrhage in 2023. These developments may spell lean times for Moutai. One of China's largest listed companies by market capitalisation, the company has earned a sizeable profit from the rich and powerful - and the heavy drinking of political cadres. 'Moutai's expensive baijiu and its political duty as a state-owned enterprise (SOE) are seen as at odds,' said Tang Dajie, a senior researcher with the China Enterprise Institute think tank in Beijing. 'As a profit-making company it certainly hopes more customers, including officials, can drink its products,' he added. 'But as an SOE it must toe the party line on austerity, even at the cost of its sales.' When Moutai held an annual shareholder reception in May, tables no longer groaned under rows of heavy white bottles. Instead, orange juice and other non-alcoholic drinks were served. Explaining the change, Moutai's Zhang said at the Tuesday meeting that as an SOE, the company must implement Beijing's decisions to combat waste. He went so far as to support a de facto baijiu ban at official functions and dinners being enforced in many localities, as well as gatherings held by other SOEs. The company also conducted a management overhaul this week, promoting younger executives to reform the firm's sales and marketing strategies. But Tang, the researcher, pointed out that Moutai cannot control how its baijiu is consumed, and its high prices are largely determined by the market. 'It has better taste and quality, and many people stock up on Moutai baijiu as an investment,' he said. 'Though Beijing's austerity push is correct, the government should not intervene in market activities.' The push to trim spending has come at an inopportune moment for Moutai, as muted economic activity has further quelled consumers' thirst for liquor. A May report from Soochow Securities said the company's years-long streak of double-digit revenue and profit growth will end in 2025. Accordingly, prices have been dropping since 2024. As of Wednesday, on several liquor trading platforms, the price of a bottle of 25-year-old Moutai had fallen below 2,000 yuan (US$278), half what had been demanded in more prosperous times. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

New SCCC leadership team to strengthen Sabah-China ties
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New SCCC leadership team to strengthen Sabah-China ties

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Disillusioned non-Malays may punish PH without backing PN, says Ramasamy
Disillusioned non-Malays may punish PH without backing PN, says Ramasamy

Daily Express

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Disillusioned non-Malays may punish PH without backing PN, says Ramasamy

Published on: Saturday, June 14, 2025 Published on: Sat, Jun 14, 2025 By: FMT Reporters Text Size: Urimai chairman P Ramasamy said it is also a mistake to treat all non-Malay voters, like Chinese, Indians and others, as if they think and vote the same way. PETALING JAYA: Even if non-Malay voters do not directly back PAS or Perikatan Nasional (PN), former Penang deputy chief minister P Ramasamy has warned that their frustration with Pakatan Harapan (PH) could still carry serious political consequences. He said political discontent among non-Malay voters may manifest not through outright support for PN, but in other forms of political disengagement. Advertisement 'Under the right socio-political conditions, there is no guarantee that the non-Malays won't abandon a hypocritical or ineffective PH-led coalition. 'It could emerge in other forms — lower turnout, protest votes, or support for alternative opposition figures,' the Urimai chairman said in a statement today. He was commenting on Wong Chin Huat's analysis in an FMT report, in which Wong said PAS's bid to woo non-Malay voters dissatisfied with PH was unlikely to succeed due to the party's entrenched 'zero-sum' political framing that alienates non-Muslims. Wong had said PAS's political messaging often presents gains for non-Muslims as losses for Muslims. This narrative tends to alienate non-Malay voters, he added. However, Ramasamy argued that such analysis may overlook the diversity and evolving sentiments within the non-Malay electorate. 'Lumping all non-Malays into a single bloc is a form of essentialism that flattens the political distinctions among Chinese, Indians and other minorities. 'Their political calculations, sentiments and thresholds of tolerance differ.' Ramasamy said Chinese voters may reject PAS over ideological and cultural differences, but noted that some Indian voters are starting to shift — not because they support PN, but because they're frustrated with the PH-led government. He went on to say that non-Malay voters are not 'blindly loyal' and any support for PAS or PN would depend on whether the coalition moves beyond narrow ethno-religious politics to address minority concerns meaningfully. 'Political allegiances are fluid, and the Malaysian political environment is evolving rapidly.' * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

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