
Hong Kong retail gets mainland makeover as Chinese brands move in
"They have taken away half of our business since they opened in December, because their mainland owner has deep pockets for top-notch decorations," lamented Ms. Fung, a Prince Noodles worker in her early 40s.

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Kyodo News
2 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Close aides to North Korean leader Kim recently visited China: sources
BEIJING - Two aides to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited Beijing after mid-July in trips believed to be linked to construction projects, sources familiar with China-North Korea relations said Sunday. Their China visits were not covered by North Korea's state-run media, making it rare for the movements of Kim's aides to become known outside official reports. The two often accompany the leader during his inspections of construction projects in North Korea. The visits suggest economic exchanges between Beijing and Pyongyang are normalizing, despite speculation that bilateral relations may have recently become strained as North Korea deepens its military ties with Russia. China is North Korea's closest and most influential ally in economic terms, but mutual visits of senior officials have been relatively rare in recent times, even since the lifting of strict travel restrictions imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic. The two aides are Kim Bok Nam, a senior military officer and brigade commander, and an unnamed senior official of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, according to the sources. They visited the Chinese capital for four days from July 12. The senior party official then traveled to Beijing alone on Aug. 2 and returned to Pyongyang three days later. Their detailed itinerary in China remains unknown. In June, the two accompanied Kim Jong Un when the leader inspected hospitals and a leisure complex under construction in Pyongyang. Since December last year, Kim Bok Nam has frequently traveled with Kim Jong Un to the sites of major construction projects, including the Wonsan Kalma tourist area on the east coast, which opened in July, media reports showed. The unnamed senior party official was first covered by official media in June this year. On Aug. 1, he accompanied Kim Jong Un to a large-scale greenhouse farm near Sinuiju in the northwestern part of the country.

Nikkei Asia
6 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Chinese state media says Nvidia H20 chips not safe for China
BEIJING (Reuters) -- Nvidia's H20 chips pose security concerns for China, a social media account affiliated with China's state media said on Sunday, after Beijing raised concerns over backdoor access in those chips. The H20 chips are also not technologically advanced or environmentally friendly, the account, Yuyuan Tantian, which is affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, said in an article published on WeChat. "When a type of chip is neither environmentally friendly, nor advanced, nor safe, as consumers, we certainly have the option not to buy it," the article concluded. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment. H20 artificial intelligence chips were developed by Nvidia for the Chinese market after the U.S. imposed export restrictions on advanced AI chips in late 2023. The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump banned their sales in April amid escalating trade tensions with China, but reversed the ban in July. China's cyberspace watchdog said on July 31 that it had summoned Nvidia to a meeting, asking the U.S. chipmaker to explain whether its H20 chips had any backdoor security risks - a hidden method of bypassing normal authentication or security controls. Nvidia later said its products had no "backdoors" that would allow remote access or control. In its article, Yuyuan Tantian said Nvidia chips could achieve functions including "remote shutdown" through a hardware "backdoor." Yuyuan Tantian's comment followed criticism against Nvidia by People's Daily, another Chinese state media outlet. In a commentary earlier this month, People's Daily said Nvidia must produce "convincing security proofs" to eliminate Chinese users' worries over security risks in its chips and regain market trust.


Yomiuri Shimbun
9 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Trump Expands Use of Tariffs to Reach National Security Goals
President Donald Trump's freewheeling use of tariffs as a tool of American power may have been more extensive than was publicly known, encompassing an array of national security goals as well as the interests of individual companies, according to internal government documents obtained by The Washington Post. This month, State Department officials considered demanding that U.S. trading partners vote against an international effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by the oceangoing container ships that are the backbone of global trade. In a draft 'action memo,' Secretary of State Marco Rubio was told that department officials had sought 'to inject this issue into the ongoing bilateral trade negotiations' with maritime nations such as Singapore. That move came after administration officials this past spring debated broadening trade negotiations with more than a dozen nations, including by requiring Israel to eliminate a Chinese company's control of a key port and insisting that South Korea publicly support deploying U.S. troops to deter China as well as Seoul's traditional rival, North Korea, the documents said. Administration officials saw trade talks as an opportunity to achieve objectives that went far beyond Trump's oft-stated goal of reducing the chronic U.S. trade deficit. In the first weeks after the president paused his 'reciprocal' tariffs April 9 to allow for negotiations, officials drew up plans to press countries near China for a closer defense relationship, including the purchase of U.S. equipment and port visits, the documents said. 'This is the first time I've seen that type of request in a trade agreement. When you're sitting at the negotiating table, you're not talking about this stuff,' said Wendy Cutler, who spent more than a quarter century in the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and is now vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute in Washington. The latest sign that Trump views tariffs as the Swiss Army knife of diplomacy came this week, when he threatened to impose a 50 percent tariff on Indian goods to compel New Delhi to halt Russian oil purchases that the U.S. says support Russia's war in Ukraine. In an eight-page list of 'supplemental negotiating objectives,' U.S. officials acknowledged that potential accords would cover issues, including military basing, 'not traditionally found in a trade agreement.' Officials also discussed pressing other nations to provide concessions for individual companies including Chevron, one of the world's 10 largest oil producers, and Elon Musk's Starlink. The negotiating document contained suggestions from other Cabinet departments in response to a request by the office of U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and bore a handwritten notation indicating that it was a May 1 draft. It is not clear whether the provisions were discussed in the negotiations. Trump has announced several framework trade agreements with the European Union, Japan, Vietnam and others. But the administration has not released formal texts. A USTR spokesperson declined to comment. 'The document sent shock waves through the government,' said one State Department employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press. 'This isn't normally how it works.' Trump on several occasions has publicly mixed trade and unrelated issues. In January, the president said he would impose tariffs on Colombian goods unless that country's leader agreed to accept deported migrants, which he eventually did. Last month, Trump threatened 50 percent tariffs on imports from Brazil if the government did not halt its prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro for allegedly fomenting a coup. On April 2, Trump described his tariffs as a response to other nations' unfair trade practices that would reduce the $1.2 trillion U.S. merchandise trade deficit. The import taxes could be lowered for countries that 'align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national security matters,' his executive order said. As U.S. negotiators scrambled to prepare for simultaneous talks with 18 top trading partners, suggestions poured in from across the administration. The South Korean government should be urged to endorse a change in the positioning of U.S. troops stationed there under the U.S. Forces Korea command, according to an early draft of a U.S.-Korea agreement. Among the goals listed was a requirement that 'Korea will issue a political statement supporting flexibility for USFK force posture to better deter China while continuing to deter [North Korea],' it said. The U.S. also wanted Seoul to boost defense spending to 3.8 percent of GDP, up from 2.6 percent last year, and to increase its $1 billion-plus contribution to cover the annual costs of basing the roughly 28,500 American troops in South Korea. In a July 28 press briefing, Woo Sang-ho, South Korea's senior secretary for political affairs, confirmed that defense issues were 'on the negotiation list.' But they were not in the agreement that Trump announced two days later. Trump nodded to his concerns over allied burden-sharing tariff remarks April 2 in the Rose Garden, during what he dubbed 'Liberation Day.' 'We take care of countries all over the world. We pay for their military. We pay for everything they have to pay. And then when you want to cut back a little bit, they get upset that you're not taking care of them any longer,' the president said. The negotiating document showed that administration officials planned to push several governments including Taiwan, India and Indonesia to increase their defense spending or to buy more U.S. military hardware. Such national security considerations may help explain why most countries did not retaliate against the U.S. with their own tariffs on American goods, said Phil Luck, director of the economics program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. 'They don't think this is just an economic competition. They're concerned we will escalate above that [and] pull out of NATO or change troop deployments,' said Luck, who served as the State Department's deputy chief economist in the Biden administration. Indeed, some Trump officials envisioned using the trade negotiations to contain Chinese strategic influence. Administration officials hoped that Trump's threat of a 49 percent tariff on Cambodian goods would persuade government officials in Phnom Penh to allow the 'U.S. Navy to conduct annual (or bi-annual) ship visits and training exercises at Ream Naval Base' in southwestern Cambodia. Washington had grown concerned over a Chinese naval presence at the facility, which offers direct access to the contested South China Sea. The U.S. wanted the Cambodian government to prohibit Chinese military 'deployments outside of Ream,' the document said. Israeli officials were to be pushed 'to remove Chinese port ownership in Haifa,' a coastal city in northern Israel. In 2015, China's Shanghai International Port Group, a majority state-owned company, won a 25-year contract to operate a new automated container-handling facility there. U.S. concerns over the Chinese presence in Haifa date to the Biden administration. U.S. Navy vessels have often docked at an Israeli navy base that is adjacent to the commercial port. U.S. officials also worried about another port under Chinese control in the northern Australian city of Darwin, which hosts about 2,500 U.S. Marines on a rotational deployment. China's Landbridge Group signed a 99-year lease to operate the Australian port in 2015. U.S. negotiators wanted a 'signal' from the Australian government of its 'intent to revisit its arrangement on the operation of the Port of Darwin by a China-backed firm.' During the Australian election campaign this year, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged to return the port to local ownership. But port worries were just one element of a broader anti-China proposal. In East Africa, the administration wanted Madagascar to refuse to permit 'China to establish military bases and expand military cooperation.' Another East African nation, the tiny island of Mauritius, should conduct a study on removing telecom equipment made by China's Huawei, ZTE and Hikvision from its telecom and surveillance networks. And officials wanted Argentina to consult with U.S. experts about implementing 'control measures' at Chinese space installations in that country to 'ensure their exclusively civilian use.' The draft also suggested ways the U.S. government could prioritize the interests of specific companies. In Lesotho, a poor southern African nation that Trump had threatened with 50 percent tariffs, negotiators wanted the government to finalize deals with 'multiple U.S. firms.' OnePower, a renewable energy start-up, should be granted 'a five-year withholding tax exemption' and a license to develop a 24-megawatt project. Regulators should waive a legal requirement for Starlink, Musk's satellite-based internet provider, to provide a physical address in Lesotho before conducting business there, the document said. In mid-April, Newsday, a newspaper in Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, reported that there was no evidence of a Starlink office at the location the company had given as its registered address, 'raising serious legal and regulatory concerns.' In Israel, U.S. officials wanted the government not to 'proceed with any draft regulations or potential plans to force Chevron to sell its interests or status as operator in one of its offshore natural gas fields.' The Houston-based energy company has been operating in Israel since 2020. 'Chevron engages regularly with government officials and key stakeholders at home and abroad as a normal course of business. While we do not discuss details, our conversations always focus on the benefits we believe we bring to the communities where we operate, including the Eastern Mediterranean,' Chevron said when asked if it had requested U.S. government help. The administration continues to leverage trade talks for broader gains. McCoy Pitt, the senior official in the State Department's international organization affairs bureau, wrote the secretary of state this month about linking trade talks with hopes of killing a global climate change deal. Pitt urged Rubio to approve a strategy before a scheduled October vote by members of the International Maritime Organization on limiting greenhouse gas emissions by large container ships. The U.N. agency in April approved draft regulations, which the State Department memo described as a 'global carbon tax.' Pitt's memo, titled 'Protecting U.S. Shipping Interests by Defeating the International Maritime Organization's 'Net-Zero Framework,'' said that as part of any trade deal with the U.S., countries 'are instructed' or 'would be expected' to vote against the IMO proposal. Through an online portal, the State Department said: 'We do not comment on purportedly leaked documents. We do, however, look forward to the story on how the Trump Administration is using reciprocal trade negotiations to benefit and fight for the American people.'