China brokers peace between Thailand and Cambodia

Intensive diplomatic efforts by China to halt the resumed armed conflict between Thailand and Cambodia and to address its underlying causes scored a significant success with a December 29, 2025, trilateral meeting of the foreign ministers of China, Cambodia, and Thailand, held in Yuxi, Yunnan Province.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi stated that since the outbreak of the border conflict between Cambodia and Thailand, China has upheld the spirit of the Global Security Initiative put forth by President Xi Jinping, actively mediating and using its good offices. Chinese leaders have maintained friendly communication with the leaders of Cambodia and Thailand, and the foreign ministers have held multiple phone conversations. The Chinese special envoy has made four shuttle visits for the important objective of listening to the two sides, accommodating their legitimate concerns, and seeking a path to resolve differences through dialogue and negotiation. Thanks to the joint efforts of all parties, the militaries of Cambodia and Thailand recently reached a ceasefire agreement, and China is pleased to see this progress.

Wang said that the trilateral meeting is timely. The three parties have held multiple bilateral talks here, and especially, the diplomatic and military departments of Cambodia and Thailand have engaged in face-to-face, in-depth exchanges. The discussions among the three parties were beneficial and constructive, leading to important consensus that:

  • It is necessary to look forward and move ahead together. The ceasefire agreement is hard-won and must not stagnate or be derailed halfway, let alone allow conflict to be reignited. This is not what the people want, nor what China hopes for.
  • Both sides should proceed step by step without stopping. The implementation of the ceasefire arrangement requires continuous communication and consultation. The restoration of bilateral relations should be gradually advanced. But as long as both sides maintain confidence and engage in equal dialogue, the goals will surely be achieved.
  • Rebuilding mutual trust is paramount. The conflict has led to a loss of trust, but Cambodia and Thailand are eternal neighbours with a long history of friendly exchanges. This gathering by the Fuxian Lake is intended to heal the wounds caused by the conflict, dispel the estrangement between the two sides, and truly restore friendly relations. This serves the interests of the Cambodian and Thai peoples and is the shared expectation of all parties. China will always be a promoter of the development of Cambodia-Thailand relations and is willing to provide all necessary assistance and support, including ceasefire monitoring, humanitarian aid, and demining cooperation.

After the trilateral meeting, a press release was issued, specifying five areas where Cambodia and Thailand will further strengthen communication and enhance understanding:

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Jimmy Lai convicted: the truth behind Hong Kong’s US‑backed colour revolution

In the clip embedded below, Ileana Chan of Empire Watch interviews KJ Noh about the recent conviction of Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai, which Western outlets have framed as an attack on press freedom. KJ notes that Jimmy Lai was found guilty on two counts of collusion with foreign forces and one count of sedition under Hong Kong’s national security laws following a 156-day trial.

Discussing the political context of the trial, KJ explains that the 2019 Hong Kong riots evolved into an attempted “colour revolution”, backed by the US, and observes that Lai used his media influence and resources to coordinate and publicise this movement. KJ also observes that Lai actively lobbied US officials to apply sanctions against China.

As such, KJ argues that Lai received a fair trial within Hong Kong’s legal system and that his conviction was justified given his involvement in sedition.

The interview expands into a discussion of Hong Kong’s colonial past, with KJ pointing out that Hong Kong under British control was not the model of liberal democracy it is sometimes painted as, but rather an apartheid colony.

China denounces Israel’s recognition of Somaliland

China has officially declared that it firmly opposes Israel’s formal recognition of Somaliland as an “independent sovereign state” and its agreement to establish “diplomatic relations” with it.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian announced this at a regular press conference in Beijing on December 29, 2025, stating that China firmly supports Somalia’s sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity, and opposes any moves that undermine them.

China has noted that the federal government of Somalia immediately issued a statement firmly rejecting the move, and regional organisations including the African Union, the Arab League, the Gulf Cooperation Council, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development have also expressed strong dissatisfaction and condemnation, Lin said.

He added that the Somaliland issue is entirely an internal affair of Somalia and should be resolved by the Somali people in a manner consistent with their national conditions and constitution. He also highlighted that countries outside the region should cease inappropriate interference and no country should incite or support separatist forces within another nation for its own selfish interests.

“We urge the Somaliland authorities to recognise the situation and immediately cease separatist activities and collusion with external forces.”

China has consistently supported Somalia in safeguarding its national sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Later, on December 29, the United Nations Security Council convened an emergency meeting in New York to discuss the situation at the request of Somalia, Algeria, Sierra Leone, and Guyana.

Addressing the session, Chinese Ambassador Sun Lei began by stating that China fully supported the four countries’ request, adding that Israel’s action had, “further increased the tensions in the Horn of Africa, drawing immediate and strong criticism and condemnations from regional organisations, including the AU [African Union], the Arab League, the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council], the OIC [Organisation of Islamic Cooperation], and IGAD [Intergovernmental Authority on Development], as well as many regional countries. China also expresses grave concerns over this move and firmly opposes it.”

He went on to say that: “Respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity is a fundamental principle of the UN Charter and an unshakable cornerstone of international law and international relations, which all UN member states must strictly observe. Somaliland is an integral part of Somali territory. China firmly supports Somalia’s sovereignty, unity, and territorial integrity, and opposes any act to split its territory. China has always maintained that the Somaliland issue is entirely Somalia’s internal affair. It should be resolved by the Somali people in a way consistent with the national conditions and the constitution… We urge the Somaliland authorities to grasp the situation, immediately stop separatist activities and collusion with external forces, and return to the track of dialogue with the federal government of Somalia as soon as possible to avoid further threatening regional peace and stability and opening the door to more tensions and conflicts.”

Continue reading China denounces Israel’s recognition of Somaliland

CPC delegation strengthens ties with Cambodia and Laos

At the invitation of the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) and the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party (LPRP), Xie Chuntao, Vice President of the Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee (National Academy of Governance), led a CPC delegation on visits to Cambodia and Laos from December 22-26, 2025.

During the visits, Xie met with Cambodian and Lao party and government leaders, including CPP President and Senate President Samdech Techo Hun Sen, and General Secretary of the LPRP Central Committee and Lao President Thongloun Sisoulith.

Cambodian and Lao leaders highly praised the importance of the fourth plenary session of the 20th CPC Central Committee for China and the world and expressed willingness to deepen exchanges and cooperation with China in various fields and promote the building of a community with a shared future.

Samdech Techo Hun Sen reaffirmed the iron-clad friendship between the two countries and called for expanded joint capacity-building programs between the two parties.

President Thongloun praised the close cooperation between the two parties and countries and stressed the importance of implementing the master plan on building a Lao-China community with a shared future. He thanked the delegation for briefing Lao leaders on the outcomes of the fourth plenary session of the 20th CPC Central Committee, noting that China’s development experience offers valuable lessons for Laos.

Xie Chuntao expressed appreciation for the warm reception and reaffirmed China’s commitment to translating agreements between the two leaders into practical cooperation across various sectors. He also conveyed best wishes for the success of the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party’s 12th National Congress, scheduled for January 6-8, 2026.

During the visit, the delegation also held working meetings with senior Lao officials and delivered presentations on major CPC policy developments.

The following articles were originally published by the Xinhua News Agency, Agence Kampuchea Presse and the KPL Lao News Agency.

CPC delegation visits Cambodia, Laos

VIENTIANE, Dec. 26 (Xinhua) — At the invitation of the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) and the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party (LPRP), Xie Chuntao, vice president of the Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee (National Academy of Governance), led a CPC delegation on visits to Cambodia and Laos from Dec. 22 to 26.

During the visits, Xie met with Cambodian and Lao party and government leaders, including CPP President and Senate President Samdech Techo Hun Sen, and General Secretary of the LPRP Central Committee and Lao President Thongloun Sisoulith.

Xie briefed the party and government officials from both countries on the spirit of the fourth plenary session of the 20th CPC Central Committee.

Cambodian and Lao leaders highly praised the importance of the fourth plenary session of the 20th CPC Central Committee for China and the world, and expressed willingness to deepen exchanges and cooperation with China in various fields and promote the building of a community with a shared future.

Continue reading CPC delegation strengthens ties with Cambodia and Laos

President Xi: No issue of the people is too small; we care for every leaf and tend every branch in the garden of people’s well-being

Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered his New Year Address for 2026, on December 31, 2025.

Below we reprint the full text of the address, as released in English by the Xinhua News Agency, preceded by a short introductory commentary by our co-editor Keith Bennett.

President Xi Jinping’s inspiring new year address represents a message of confidence, determination and optimism which stands in stark contrast to the depression, crisis and sense of drift prevailing in the major capitalist countries. Both in tone and content it reflects how socialism, with a strong communist party at its core, is again rising and assuming an enhanced role in the world in terms of both achievement and attraction.

This spirit animates the entire speech. As President Xi notes, this year just past saw the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War, the celebration of which, immediately following the largest ever gatherings of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, where the Global Governance Initiative was unveiled, further raised the international prestige and standing of socialist China, with the participation of leaders from dozens of countries, the elucidation of ways and means to achieve a better world, and the demonstration of China’s ever growing defensive military prowess which constitutes a fundamental guarantee of peace.

A similar message can be seen in the economy and domestic development. With the world having experienced a ‘Deep Seek moment’, President Xi underlined the purpose of socialist competition as being a “race to the top”, a ‘win win’ concept contrasting with the race to the bottom that characterizes the decadent stage of monopoly capitalism.

In turn, the cultural self-confidence that this facilitates and embodies, from humanoid robots performing kung fu kicks, through Wukong and Nezha, to the grassroots football leagues of Guizhou, shows both how life for the masses of the Chinese people is becoming more dignified and joyful as well as the growing attraction of Chinese civilization, culture and ‘soft power’ for people throughout the world – and most importantly how these two aspects are inextricably interconnected and mutually reinforcing.

When President Xi speaks of how the rights and interests of workers in new forms of employment, not least the ‘gig economy’, have been better protected, better facilities have been created for the elderly, and increased subsidies provided to help families with childcare, it is simply impossible not to draw comparisons with our situation in Britain, where ‘gig economy’ workers lack the most basic protections, social care for the elderly is a national shame that successive governments have been singularly unwilling and unable to tackle, and ever growing numbers of children are being raised in poverty, with consequences they will carry for the rest of their lives.

Continue reading President Xi: No issue of the people is too small; we care for every leaf and tend every branch in the garden of people’s well-being

China Changes Everything: A book review

In the following review of the new anthology China Changes Everything, Steve Lalla describes the book as “a must for those who seek facts about the economic, political, and cultural development of China since 1949, particularly in comparison to that of the United States and particularly regarding the most hotly debated issues”.

On the issues of public health, the climate crisis, foreign policy orientation and more, China Changes Everything “succinctly contrasts the facts of life in the US, Europe, or Canada with those in the People’s Republic, and confirms that the glaring differences exist precisely because China has not followed the capitalist path of prioritising corporate profit over basic public needs”.

Steve recommends all progressive people in the West to read the book, and concludes that it “outlines a realistic vision for our future and provides hope for those in the West who are often disillusioned with all social and political projects”.

This book review originally appeared in Orinoco Tribune. China Changes Everything can be purchased from Amazon US and Amazon UK.

A new book edited by Kyle Ferrana, China Changes Everything, bills itself as an anthology by “social justice activists, journalists, and commentators” and brings together chapters about the People’s Republic of China written by prominent left-wing analysts, including Arnold August, Roger Harris, Radhika Desai, Carlos Martinez, Gerald Horne, Lee Siu Hin, Margaret Kimberley, Danny Haiphong, KJ Noh, Sara Flounders, and many more.

The publication covers a comprehensive range of subjects in the ongoing “China debate” and includes chapters on such hot topics as China’s relation to Palestine and China’s foreign affairs policies, its banking and healthcare system, its transportation infrastructure and the rail and air infrastructure that China has helped to build in developing nations, its achievements in green technology and poverty alleviation, China’s military expenditures and aims, its role in the “space race,” its alleged genocide of the Uyghurs, and the status of Taiwan and Tibet, among others.

The first entry—written by Sara Flounders and titled “A Fundamental Difference: China—Socialist or Imperialist?”—dispels the widespread myth prevalent among Western thinkers (and even among Western Marxists) that China’s economy is essentially capitalist. Flounders contrasts China’s economic system with that of the US and demonstrates how it is the essential differences in their respective economic structures that have propelled China’s economic growth since its liberation in 1949: “In the United States, nearly all resources are privately owned by a handful of billionaires. Even public forests, waters, and raw minerals are ripe for exploitation for private profit. In China, the overwhelming bulk of resources—oil, gas, coal, gold, gems, rare earth minerals, and water are socially owned and used for the development of the whole society.”

Continue reading China Changes Everything: A book review

China and Vietnam successfully round off friendship year

China and Vietnam have successfully seen out 2025, designated as their Year of People-to-People Exchanges marking the 75th anniversary of their diplomatic relations, with a varied series of activities.

Chinese and Vietnamese troops conducted a joint border patrol on December 25. Under the rotational mechanism, this joint patrol was chaired by the Chinese side. Both sides agreed to continue strengthening coordination mechanisms, jointly combating cross-border violations, promoting rapid handover mechanisms, ensuring a safe border environment, facilitating customs clearance at border gates, and enhancing friendship exchanges and cooperation.

On December 23, a special exhibition on President Ho Chi Minh in China opened at the Hongyan Revolutionary History Museum in Chongqing.

Held under the theme “The Revolutionary Path,” the exhibition is structured into four sections focusing on organisational building, the shared struggle against a common enemy and foreign aggression, mutual support, and the joint creation of a glorious chapter in history.

Featuring more than 230 historical photographs and valuable archival images, the exhibition vividly retraces President Ho Chi Minh’s revolutionary life while reflecting a special and memorable period in Vietnam-China relations. During his revolutionary career, President Ho Chi Minh made many visits and spent much time in China, including an important period in Hongyan village in Chongqing, which housed the Southern Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the representative office of the Eighth Route Army in Chongqing.

Speaking at the event, Vietnamese Consul General in Chongqing Bui Nguyen Long underlined the exhibition’s special significance as it coincides with the 135th birth anniversary of President Ho Chi Minh and the 75th anniversary of the establishment of Vietnam-China diplomatic relations.

The exhibition, he said, will help the two peoples, particularly the younger generation, gain a deeper understanding of the heroic and illustrious chapters of Vietnam-China traditional friendship.

On the sidelines of the exhibition, the Hongyan Revolutionary History Museum, in coordination with the Vietnamese Consulate General in Chongqing, introduced a coffee product named “Comrades and Brothers.” Made from Vietnamese Robusta coffee beans sourced from Buon Ma Thuot and buffalo milk from China’s Guangxi region, the product aims to further spread the positive values of Vietnam-China relations among communities in western China.

In an interview published on December 24, Professor Wang Yong, Director of the Centre for International Political Economy at Peking University, said that Vietnam-China relations are maintaining strong and comprehensive momentum and have reached an “unprecedented height” while entering a new phase of development with prospects for broader and deeper cooperation.

Speaking to the Vietnam News Agency correspondent in China, Wang said that since the start of 2025, the two countries have carried out a wide range of activities to mark the 75th anniversary of their diplomatic relations, including the high-level visits and exchanges, as well as cooperation initiatives between the two sides’ ministries, sectors and localities. He noted that the high frequency of contacts at various levels reflects the strong impetus behind bilateral ties and demonstrates that overall relations are being promoted in a highly positive and substantive manner.

Looking ahead, Wang affirmed that Vietnam-China relations are entering what he described as a “golden period” of cooperation. He predicted that the two sides will continue to maintain high-level exchanges, expand partnerships in infrastructure, energy, innovation, and science and technology, while further promoting people-to-people exchanges and cooperation between localities.

On December 21, in Beijing, in an atmosphere imbued with warm friendship, the program, “Vietnam Culture Day in China” was held at the China National Opera House. This was the concluding event of a series of exchange activities marking the 75th anniversary of the establishment of Vietnam-China diplomatic relations and the Vietnam-China People-to-People Exchange Year 2025. More than 1,000 people attended.

Continue reading China and Vietnam successfully round off friendship year

China backs Venezuela, condemns US at UN Security Council

China has condemned the US threats to and aggression against Venezuela and reaffirmed its support for the government of President Maduro.

Speaking at a United Nations Security Council Briefing held on December 23, 2025, Ambassador Sun Lei began by stating that China appreciates Slovenia’s presidency for convening the emergency meeting requested by Venezuela and supported by Russia, China, and other countries.

He stated that: “For some time now, under the pretext of combating drug trafficking, the United States has continued to increase its military deployment in the waters of the Caribbean off the coast of Venezuela. It has escalated sanctions, blockades, and military threats against Venezuela and claimed to have sunk Venezuelan vessels, shot dead crew members, and seized oil tankers. It has designated the Venezuelan Government as a foreign terrorist organisation, claimed that Venezuela’s territory, oil, and assets belong to the United States, and even threatened military strikes against the Venezuelan territory.

“The US actions seriously infringe upon other countries’ sovereignty, security, and legitimate rights and interests, seriously violate the UN Charter and international law, and threaten peace and security in Latin America and the Caribbean.”

The Chinese representative went on to note that: “As an independent sovereign state, Venezuela has the right to independently develop mutually beneficial cooperation with other countries and defend its legitimate rights and interest, which should be respected and supported by the international community. China opposes all acts of unilateralism and bullying and supports all countries in defending their sovereignty and national dignity. We stand against any move that violates the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and infringes upon other countries’ sovereignty and security, against the threat or use of force in international relations, against external interference in Venezuela’s internal affairs under any pretext, and against illicit unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction that have no basis in international law or authorisation by the Security Council.”

The following is the full text of Ambassador Sun Lei’s remarks. They were originally published on the website of China’s Permanent Mission to the UN.

President,

China appreciates Slovenia’s presidency for convening this emergency meeting requested by Venezuela and supported by Russia, China, and other countries. We thank Assistant Secretary-General Khaled Khiari for his briefing.

For some time now, under the pretext of combating drug trafficking, the United States has continued to increase its military deployment in the waters of the Caribbean off the coast of Venezuela. It has escalated sanctions, blockades, and military threats against Venezuela and claimed to have sunk Venezuelan vessels, shot dead crew members, and seized oil tankers. It has designated the Venezuelan Government as a foreign terrorist organization, claimed that Venezuela’s territory, oil, and assets belong to the United States, and even threatened military strikes against the Venezuelan territory. The US actions and rhetoric have led to continued tensions in the region, raising serious concerns among regional countries and the international community. 

The UN Charter establishes the fundamental principles of governing international relations, including sovereign equality, non-interference in internal affairs, and peaceful settlement of disputes. They constitute the cornerstone of international rule of law and are crucial for maintaining world peace and security. The US actions seriously infringe upon other countries’ sovereignty, security, and legitimate rights and interests, seriously violate the UN Charter and international law, and threaten peace and security in Latin America and the Caribbean. More and more countries in the region and beyond have voiced their grave concern about and strong condemnation of the US actions. We note that Secretary-General Guterres has clearly stated the need for all countries to respect international law and the UN Charter, exercise restraint, and deescalate tensions to preserve regional stability, and his readiness for good offices to this end. 

China attaches importance to President Maduro’s recent open letter. As an independent sovereign state, Venezuela has the right to independently develop mutually beneficial cooperation with other countries and defend its legitimate rights and interest, which should be respected and supported by the international community. China opposes all acts of unilateralism and bullying, and supports all countries in defending their sovereignty and national dignity. We stand against any move that violates the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and infringes upon other countries’ sovereignty and security, against the threat or use of force in international relations, against external interference in Venezuela’s internal affairs under any pretext, and against illicit unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction that have no basis in international law or authorization by the Security Council. We call the United States to heed the just call of the international community, immediately halt relevant actions, and avoid further escalation of tensions. We urge the United States to uphold the navigation safety of regional countries and the freedom and rights they enjoy under international law, to conduct normal law enforcement and judicial cooperation under bilateral and multilateral legal frameworks, to lift illicit unilateral sanctions, and to do more to promote peace, stability, and development in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

President, 

Latin America and the Caribbean constitute an important part of the Global South and are a vital force in maintaining world peace and stability and promoting global development and prosperity. China recently released its third policy paper on Latin America and the Caribbean, reaffirming its support for the Proclamation of Latin America and the Caribbean as a Zone of Peace and the Declaration of the Member States of the Agency for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean. This fully demonstrates the high importance attached to and the support by China for the region. China stands ready to work with countries in the region to strengthen solidarity and cooperation, uphold fairness and justice, and jointly safeguard peace and stability in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

Thank you, President.

Nicolás Maduro commemorates the birth of Mao Zedong

On Friday 26 December, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro marked the birth anniversary of Chairman Mao with a message on his official Telegram channel.

Attached to the message is a video in which President Maduro elaborates on the historic importance of the Chinese Revolution and China’s role in the world. The video transcript (translated to English by us) reads as follows:

Our tribute to the Great Helmsman Mao Zedong, founder of the People’s Republic of China, who, through his example, his ideas, and the revolutionary struggle he led, undoubtedly shaped the 20th century worldwide and marked the future of China. The 21st century is the century in which the destiny of humanity, as President Xi Jinping says, must be characterised by the common destiny of humanity.

Only the great republic founded by the great Mao Zedong, the great Helmsman, was able to bring China and the entire Chinese people together, enabling them to establish a political model that has allowed for the development and expansion of productive forces, and has managed to transform China in just 50 or 60 years from a semi-feudal country to a country with the highest level of scientific, technological, cultural, economic, financial and commercial development in the world.

A powerful culture and a powerful revolution, the revolution of the Great Helmsman, who founded the People’s Republic of China on 1 October 1949.

One must study the epic journey of the Chinese people and how the Great Helmsman, Mao Zedong, together with the Communist Party of China and the People’s Liberation Army, managed to forge the greatest national alliance in Chinese history.

We share the same values, the historic values of the great Mao Zedong and Xi Jinping, Simón Bolívar and Hugo Chávez. So we are united in soul, spirit and values.

Below you will find the text of the Telegram message (translated to English by us) and the associated video.

We celebrate the birthday of Mao Zedong, one of the giants of the 20th century. His genius in strategy and the formation of a revolutionary army of workers and peasants demonstrated that peoples can defeat empires. His legacy taught us that: “Weapons are an important factor in war, but not the decisive one; the decisive factor is man and not things”. This strategic vision was the cornerstone for the victory and liberation of the Chinese people.

Thanks to leaderships like that of Mao, China has regained its power, transforming itself into a superpower of knowledge, education and technology, and restoring dignity to a nation. Mao’s figure represents rebellion and the construction of a sovereign project, elements that inspire our homeland in the defence of its own sovereignty and independence.

China, the construction of multipolar world, and the pursuit of sovereignty

In the following article, which was originally published on the website of Al Mayadeen, Pedro Monzón Barata argues that, through a series of major initiatives and practical programs, China is offering the Global South tools for financial autonomy, strategic alliances, and development beyond US hegemony:

“At a historic moment when the Western liberal order shows clear signs of exhaustion… China emerges not merely as an economic competitor, but as the architect of a geopolitical alternative… China is no longer an emerging power: it is the only nation with the economic, technological, financial, and diplomatic scale capable of seriously challenging US unipolar hegemony.”

Faced with this reality, he suggests that “Western elites have revived the old rhetoric of the ‘Yellow Peril’ – racist and manipulative narrative that seeks to criminalise the peaceful rise of a non-Western country and justify policies of containment, blockade, and confrontation.”

But for its part: “China’s strategy does not aim simply to displace Washington, but rather – through historical patience and strategic pragmatism – to weave the pillars of a multipolar world in which power is no longer concentrated in a single pole but distributed among multiple centres of sovereign decision-making.”

An example is how the SWIFT international payments mechanism, which has been misused to disconnect Cuba, Russia and other countries from the international financial system, has been answered by China’s rolling out of the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), “an infrastructure that, while not replacing SWIFT, offers a sovereign, more efficient, and less costly channel for international transactions.”

On a grander scale, the significance of BRICS+ goes beyond statistics: “By bringing together the world’s leading oil and gas producers – controlling over 40% of global reserves… and now also incorporating strategic actors from the Caribbean, the Southern Cone, and Southeast Asia, the bloc has acquired unprecedented geopolitical weight.”

Moreover: “Cuba’s inclusion – historically a symbol of anti-imperialist resistance in Latin America, with a small economy but a vast medical, scientific, educational, ethical, solidarity-based, and diplomatic capital – marks a shift of notable significance: for the first time, a socialist Third World country that has resisted more than six decades of blockade joins the core of a bloc aspiring to redefine the global order away from neoliberalism and toward fraternity. This reinforces the BRICS+’s plurinational, anti-hegemonic, and civilisational diversity, distancing it even further from the exclusive G7 club.”

However, the nature and role of BRICS+ should not be overestimated or misrepresented. “Beneath its discourse of South-South solidarity and equitable multipolarity, historical bilateral tensions persist (traditionally between India and China), alongside ideological differences and often contradictory energy and geopolitical agendas. Thus, BRICS+ is not a unified front, but a complex negotiating space where cooperation and competition coexist.”

Latin America is a key arena: “Historically trapped in the dynamics of dependency, the region now sees China as an opportunity to diversify partners and break from its traditional subordination to the West. Yet opposing forces exist: on one side, oligarchic interests subordinate to the United States and Western capitalism; on the other, those who genuinely support deeper relations but simultaneously aim to protect national interests…

“Venezuela and Nicaragua represent paradigmatic cases of how the pursuit of national sovereignty intertwines with the construction of a multipolar order. Both countries, subjected for decades to unilateral sanctions, financial blockades, and destabilisation operations orchestrated from Washington, have found in China a strategic ally that respects their right to self-determination.”

Continue reading China, the construction of multipolar world, and the pursuit of sovereignty

Xizang’s leap from serfdom to Socialism with Chinese Characteristics

The following article by the Montreal-based political activist and writer Arnold August outlines his observations and conclusions following his seven-day visit to China’s Xizang (Tibet) Autonomous Region in October 2023 and is reprinted from the recently published book China Changes Everything.

Arnold notes that, “the reality before 1951 was stark. Under a feudal theocracy, about 5% of the population were serf-owners, while at least 95% were serfs.”

He explains how the crushing of the March 1959 reactionary uprising, that aimed to perpetuate the serf-owning system, opened the way to democratic reforms, development, poverty alleviation and the transition to socialism.

The results have been striking. From 1965 to 2024:

  • Per capita disposable income of rural residents rose from 108 to 21,578 yuan.
  • Life expectancy more than doubled from 35.5 to 72.5 years.
  • Road network length grew from 14,000 km to 124,900 km.
  • Rail network operation went from zero to 1,359 km.
  • Number of schools expanded from 1,828 to 3,618.

A particular strong feature of the article is Arnold’s refutation of the grotesque charge of “cultural genocide”. Through a comparison of the residential – or boarding – schools that he visited in modern Xizang with the all too recent experience of such institutions for the children of the indigenous populations of the settler colonial states in North America, he makes it very clear who are the real guilty parties when it comes to genocide:

“Consider this testimony from a youth in a boarding school, also called a residential school. Authorities berated him constantly, beat him, forbade him from speaking his language or practicing his culture, and sexually assaulted him. Did this incident occur in China? No. It happened in Canada, as documented by one of the foremost historians of Canada’s Indigenous peoples and residential schools, Dr. Sean Carleton of the University of Manitoba… Even Canada’s own records show that more than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced into residential schools, and an estimated 6,000 children died there.”

Moreover: “While the Tibetan language is flourishing… the proportion of Indigenous people in Canada who can speak an Indigenous language has steadily declined. In 2021, only 13.1% of the Indigenous population reported being able to hold a conversation in an Indigenous language. In the United States, official figures suggest that only about 5% of Indigenous people can do so. In contrast, in Xizang and the Tibetan areas of Qinghai Province, 100% of the population speaks their ancestral language.”

He further notes that: “In Quebec, our music, cinema, journalism, fiction, non-fiction, and poetry remain entirely marginal under the dominance of Anglo-American culture… This personal background has given me a deep appreciation for issues of language, identity, and cultural preservation, making me particularly sensitive to what I observed in Xizang.”

My seven-day visit in 2023 to Xizang (previously known as “Tibet”) provided the foundation for this chapter. I expand here on three articles and one video, first published in Global Times (China) and China Global Television Network (CGTN).[1] I shared this rare experience and gained wide reprints in the West.

From Serfs to Architects of Their Own Destiny

As a participant in the 2023 trip, I viewed Xizang’s historical film footage. The images, video, and still photographs show life under serfdom before the 1951 peaceful liberation. These visuals were reinforced by conversations with people in Xizang, which further solidified our understanding during our tour.

“Tibet” has long been shrouded in mystery and misinformation. But the reality before 1951 was stark. Under a feudal theocracy, about 5% of the population were serf-owners, while at least 95% were serfs. I will never forget the film about a mother, a grandmother, and a small child, all born in the cowshed of a serf-owner. They lived there as the fourth generation under such conditions.

After 1951, Xizang underwent significant changes, notably the rapid expansion of transportation. Yet, the event that remains most vivid for the people we spoke to is the abolition of serfdom on March 28, 1959. After liberation, parts of the old ruling class resisted change to maintain the serf system. On March 10, 1959, the deposed elites who opposed democratic reforms, along with the Dalai Lama, organized a U.S.-led armed revolt. The insurrection was defeated, and the Dalai Lama fled with close followers to India.

While they abandoned Xizang, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the Communist Party of China (CPC) pressed ahead in cooperation with Tibetans. According to the people we met during the visit, Beijing created around 10 activist-advisor committees, which were dispatched to grassroots areas more than 190,000 times between 2012 and 2020. Their task was to complete the plan to eliminate extreme poverty. This project, led by and for Tibetans, was achieved in 2020—a remarkable milestone for Xizang.

Since the founding of the Xizang Autonomous Region in 1965, marking its 60th anniversary in 2025, progress has been striking.

From 1965 to 2024, the most recent period for which figures are available, Xizang saw dramatic improvements:

  • Per capita disposable income of rural residents rose from 108 to 21,578 yuan.
  • Life expectancy increased from 35.5 to 72.5 years.
  • Road network length grew from 14,000 km to 124,900 km.
  • Rail network operation went from zero to 1,359 km.
  • Number of schools expanded from 1,828 to 3,618.[2]

Today, 15 years of publicly funded education are available, from kindergarten through high school.[3] And I discovered even more advances.

Infrastructure as a Unifying Force: From the Qin Dynasty to the Present

The 60th anniversary of the establishment of the Xizang Autonomous Region is being celebrated in 2025. In this context, I would like to share my experience with infrastructure.

My interest in Xizang’s infrastructure began with the Qin Dynasty, which flourished more than 2,000 years ago, and its vision of unification. I first encountered this history during my three-week trip across much of China in 2006. During this tour I learned that the Qin Dynasty established a uniform axle width for its dirt roads. This standard ensured that all animal-drawn carts could follow the same ruts without damaging roads or creating confusion.

It may sound banal, but the problem was serious. Rain could worsen the road conditions. The Qin axle width norm reminded me of driving in Canada in ice and snow, where cars leave separate furrows. Drivers must sometimes slide sideways from one rut to another, an exhausting and unsafe experience.

In the Qin period, the uniform axle width was revolutionary. It showed the dynasty’s dedication to unity. First, the Qin recognized a widespread problem. Then they devised an engineering solution suited to their time. These roads carried goods, such as food, and services. This innovation highlights, for generations of Chinese, an early concern for the population’s well-being. That consideration, rooted in governance 2,000 years ago, remains a feature of political rule in China today.

The Qin connection came to mind again during my 2023 train trip on the “Roof of the World” to Lhasa. The journey began in Qinghai Province, Xizang’s neighbor, where one-fifth of the population is of Tibetan descent. Its capital, Xining, has a modern railway station. From there, we traveled close to 2,000 km over 22 hours, often at altitudes near 5,000 meters. This is equivalent to half the height of Mount Everest. We passed through breathtaking mountains and herds of yak. The long climb also allowed us to acclimatize gradually to the thin air before reaching Lhasa, and it proved ideal for meditating on China’s long tradition of unifying infrastructure—stretching back centuries—now contributing to the integration of Xizang with the rest of China.

This railroad itself is an engineering marvel, recognized even by many Western experts. It is also a medical milestone. More than 2,000 medical staff accompanied the workers who built it under harsh conditions—low oxygen, extreme cold, heavy snow, and unstable permafrost. The railway, along with other transport projects in Xizang, shows that development in the PRC is not just a modern feat. It continues China’s historical tradition of unification through standardization and connectivity.

The Individual and the Collective in Xizang: The Story of a Drone Invention

Beyond the railroad, I was struck by another kind of infrastructure in Xizang. I discovered it in a newly built town near Lhasa, at the High-Tech Zone Innovation and Entrepreneurship Service Platform.

Here, individual initiative is encouraged. One example stood out: a specialized drone designed to help farmers in mountainous areas. Developed by small start-up companies housed in the High-Tech Zone, these drones operate at high altitudes, where it is difficult for people to work. The drones spray pesticides and fertilizers, saving time and lowering costs compared with traditional methods. They also provide advanced field mapping, which supports more substantial harvests and stability in rugged terrain.

But how did such a drone emerge in Lhasa?

At the High-Tech Zone, anyone with a computer and internet access can apply. The appeal is simple: “Bring your ideas.” Yet there are conditions. Applicants must agree to work toward the goals of socialism and modernization set by the PRC and the CPC. Membership in the CPC is not required, but anyone who has been expelled from the party cannot apply. This political orientation is clear even in the murals inside the tech center, which display portraits of leaders from Chairman Mao to President Xi, alongside milestones of the PRC’s development, including Xizang.

Does this political framework stifle individual initiative? Some in the West, shaped by the U.S.-centric notion of the sacred “individual,” may think so. But what I observed suggested otherwise. The tech center represents a balance between collective purpose and individual creativity, a hallmark of socialism with Chinese characteristics. Innovators there integrate social responsibility with personal ambition. They are rewarded not only with the satisfaction of turning their ideas into reality but also with solid incomes from marketing their products.

For me, the drone stood as proof that the market and state-led socialism fully complement each other. Alongside the drive to eradicate extreme poverty and the marvel of the railway, it shows once more how “China changes everything” through a dynamic blend of bottom-up and top-down efforts, where everyone has a role.

Boarding Schools “Here and There”

As part of Western disinformation campaigns against China, authorities in Canada, the U.S., and Europe, along with some of the corporate press, claim that Tibetans face “suppression.” They point to boarding schools in Xizang and neighboring Qinghai Province, where about one-fifth of the population is Tibetan. The PRC is accused of carrying out “cultural genocide” against Tibetans.

But consider this testimony from a youth in a boarding school, also called a residential school. Authorities berated him constantly, beat him, forbade him from speaking his language or practicing his culture, and sexually assaulted him. Did this incident occur in China? No. It happened in Canada, as documented by one of the foremost historians of Canada’s Indigenous peoples and residential schools, Dr. Sean Carleton of the University of Manitoba.[4]

And this was not an isolated case. Multiply it by hundreds of thousands. Even Canada’s own records show that more than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced into residential schools, and an estimated 6,000 children died there.[5]

In 2024, I conducted an exclusive interview with Mohawk Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, whose insights carry deep weight for this discussion. In the northern portion of Turtle Island, she first rose to prominence in 1990 as the spokesperson for the Mohawk Nation during the 78-day siege known as the so-called “Oka Crisis.” At that time, fully armed Canadian soldiers encircled her community with armored vehicles, supported by local police.[6] The struggle was over the defense of traditional Mohawk land.

Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel’s lifelong advocacy has since earned wide recognition. In 2024, she became the first Indigenous person to receive the 38th Grand Prix du Conseil des arts de Montréal, awarded for her decades of work and for a documentary highlighting the pivotal role of Mohawk women in the 1990 land defense.[7] That same year, she published a book on the same subject with Professor Sean Carleton. It quickly became a bestseller and had already reached its fourth printing.[8]

In my interview, Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel explained that Canada’s “boarding schools” were designed to “get rid of the Indian problem.” This goal should not come as a surprise. As she pointed out, the Canadian Indian Act created a colonial settler state and provided the legal foundation for cultural genocide through the residential school system. That same legislation was even studied and copied by South Africa as a blueprint for Apartheid.

Katsi’tsakwas Ellen spoke candidly about her own childhood. She and her siblings were raised to “feel ashamed of the Mohawk language; my parents whispered it when speaking.” Canada’s aim, she said, was to instill “cultural self-hatred and the erasure of self-esteem.” Despite this, she explained, her parents tried to shield their children from racism. “Some teachers and students called us savages and unruly,” she recalled, but “my parents taught us: you are not a savage, not stupid, you can go to school.”[9]

Even before the recent discovery of unmarked graves at former residential school sites, the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) had already exposed the scale of the crimes. In 2015, its final report called on Canada “to confront ‘cultural genocide’ of residential schools.”[10] Other assessments have been even more direct: “Canada is guilty of cultural genocide against Indigenous peoples.”[11] The government formally accepted the TRC report but has become notorious for failing to implement most of its key recommendations. This ongoing inaction and ambiguity have fueled what some now call “residential school denial.”[12] Canada, in denial mode, also denies the view that China’s “Tibet” policy demonstrates how modernization can be pursued alongside cultural preservation and promotion. Furthermore, even as Canada levels unfounded accusations of cultural genocide against China in Xizang and Tibetan regions of Qinghai, it has yet to confront its own human rights violations, including the genocide of Indigenous peoples.

In contrast to the genocidal Canadian residential school system, during my 2023 trip, I visited a boarding school in a Tibetan minority area of Qinghai Province, near the Xizang border. Students are taught primarily the Tibetan language, as well as Chinese and English, to facilitate communication throughout the country. The curriculum also includes Chemistry, History, Psychology, Biology, Physics, Politics, Morality, Geography, Sports, and Health. The cafeteria serves a wide variety of high-quality food and beverages, likely to be the envy of many Western students from working-class families. Up to 1,200 students can dine together across two floors. Modern dormitories are heated with underfloor heating, with separate floors for boys and girls.

While the Tibetan language is flourishing at that boarding school, the proportion of Indigenous people in Canada who can speak an Indigenous language has steadily declined. In 2021, only 13.1% of the Indigenous population reported being able to hold a conversation in an Indigenous language.[13] In the United States, official figures suggest that only about 5% of Indigenous people can do so.[14] In contrast, in Xizang and the Tibetan areas of Qinghai Province, 100% of the population speaks their ancestral language.

“But at What Cost”?

When we challenge the mainstream media narrative about China’s success in building socialism with Chinese characteristics, the inevitable response is often: “What about Tibet?” The insinuation is that, while grudgingly acknowledging China’s progress, this advance supposedly comes at the expense of Tibetan language and culture, broadly defined to include religion. As discussed earlier, this is not the case. Yet the accusation is so pervasive that it is worthwhile examining it from another angle.

During my visit to Xizang, I viewed the region through the lens of my upbringing in Montreal, Quebec, a primarily French-speaking province with this heritage dating back to France since 1618. Yet, in Quebec, our music, cinema, journalism, fiction, non-fiction, and poetry remain entirely marginal under the dominance of Anglo-American culture. Despite government protection efforts, Quebec is constantly inundated with the most superficial American and British cultural icons, and U.S. television dominates our homes. This infiltration occurs either directly, through outlets such as CNN or American culture-focused TV channels, or indirectly, such as through the Canadian media. This personal background has given me a deep appreciation for issues of language, identity, and cultural preservation, making me particularly sensitive to what I observed in Xizang.

My visit to Lhasa’s old town was a powerful reminder of China’s unique approach to integrating language and culture—including religion—with modernity, while fully safeguarding traditional practices. As I walked through Lhasa, I saw people dressed in traditional garments, hundreds of Buddhist monks in religious attire, and traditional architecture alongside modern malls. Children were rollerblading, families were enjoying amusement parks, and curious local people approached our group to practice their English.

At Jokhang Temple, in the heart of the old town, I observed traditional Tibetan architecture housing the Gelug school monastery—the most recent of several key schools of Tibetan Buddhism. The teaching language is, of course, Tibetan. A visit to the imposing Potala Palace, overlooking Lhasa, offered another perspective. The Palace plays a central role not only in religion but also in Xizang’s traditional politics and thought. It contains nearly 700 murals, 10,000 painted scrolls, and an extensive collection of historical documents. If the Western-driven narrative of Tibetan “suppression” were true, China’s commitment to preserving and promoting Xizang’s history would be inexplicable.

The preservation of the Tibetan language is equally evident. At Xizang University, established in 1985 in Lhasa, courses are taught in Tibetan and Mandarin. The university enrolls more than 20,000 students and maintains an internationally renowned Tibetan studies department, along with a majority-Tibetan student body.

The special visit to the Tibetan Ancient Documents Research Center on its Lhasa campus, which focuses on the Phuri Manuscripts, was impressive. These manuscripts constitute China’s most ancient and extensive collection of ancient Tibetan literature. They offer insights into a kingdom established around the 13th and 14th centuries and portray the natural environment, traditional customs, social structures, and history.

If the Western anti-China narrative of “cultural genocide” in Xizang held any truth, China would need to “root out” these seeds of the Tibetan people to erase their collective memory, as is being attempted in Canada and the U.S. against Indigenous peoples. However, on the ground in Xizang, we witnessed the opposite.

The Xizang Museum, completed in 1999, is the first large, modern museum in Xizang. It features a collection of more than 520,000 artifacts, focusing on the various dynastic periods of Tibetan history. It is widely accepted that, to commit genocide against a people, the very roots of their civilization and history must be eradicated. Yet, on the ground, we observed the opposite.

We also visited the Tibetan Autonomous Region Intangible Cultural Heritage Preservation Center. Since 2012, the central and local governments have invested more than 400 million yuan ($55.7 million) in protecting Tibetan intangible cultural heritage through this center. We saw seniors playing Tibetan musical instruments, and youth performing traditional Tibetan opera. The unfortunate situation in Quebec stands in sharp contrast to the flourishing Tibetan culture. What I saw in Xizang was a proactive, well-funded, and systematic commitment to heritage preservation.

In conclusion, “China changes everything” in Xizang through the creative application of socialism with Chinese characteristics, while promoting its language, culture, and religion.


[1] Arnold August, “Witnessing Xizang: Serfdom to Socialism with Chinese Characteristics,” CGTN, May 23, 2024, https://news.cgtn.com/news/2024-05-23/Witnessing-Xizang-Serfdom-to-socialism-with-Chinese-characteristics-1tPXIWdtBHq/p.html; Arnold August, “Xizang at 60: How the region Balances Tradition, Nature, and Progress,” Global Times, August 31, 2025, https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202508/1342195.shtml; Arnold August, “What I Saw in Xizang Was a Proactive, Well-Funded and Systematic Commitment to Heritage Preservation,” Global Times, July 29, 2025, https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202507/1339572.shtml; Arnold August, “Truth Seen in Xizang: Xizang’s Infrastructures Links Tradition with Modernity, Says a Canadian Journalist,” Global Times, September 9, 2025, https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202509/1343040.shtml.

[2] GT Graphic, “60 Years of Xizang Autonomous Region’s Development in Numbers,” Global Times, August 19, 2025, https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202508/1341207.shtml.

[3] GT Staff Reporters, “Feast on Plateau: Images, Data Reveal Xizang’s Modernization Miracle on Autonomous Region’s 60th Anniversary,” Global Times, August 22, 2025, https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202508/1341521.shtml.

[4] Alessia Passafiume, “Manitoba Historian Concerned Residential School Denialism Will Rise After Biden’s Apology in U.S.,” CBC News, October 27, 2024, https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/canada-indigenous-residential-school-denialism-1.7364980.

[5] USW union directors, “There’s No Denying It: Indigenous Children Suffered and Died at Residential Schools,” United Steelworkers (USW), September 22, 2023, https://usw.ca/theres-no-denying-it-indigenous-children-suffered-and-died-at-residential-schools/.

[6] Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, “Kanehsatake 35 Years Later: Remembering the Day Canada Sent in the Military to Violently Clear Mohawk Land for a Golf Course,” Ricochet Media, July 11, 2025, https://ricochet.media/indigenous/landback/kanehsatake-35-years-later-remembering-the-day-canada-sent-in-the-military-to-violently-clear-mohawk-land-for-a-golf-course/.

[7] Conseil des arts de Montréal, “Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel Wins the 38th Grand Prix du Conseil des arts de Montréal,” press release, April 11, 2024, https://www.artsmontreal.org/en/news/katsitsakwas-ellen-gabriel-wins-the-38th-grand-prix-du-conseil-des-arts-de-montreal/.

[8] Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, with Sean Carleton, When the Pine Needles Fall: Indigenous Acts of Resistance (Between the Lines, 2024), https://btlbooks.com/book/when-the-pine-needles-fall.

[9] Arnold August, Interview: Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, Grand Prix, Conseil des arts de Montréal by Arnold August, YouTube video, uploaded May 22, 2024, https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/truth-and-reconciliation-commission-urges-canada-to-confront-cultural-genocide-of-residential-schools-1.3096229.

[10] CBC News, “Truth and Reconciliation Commission Urges Canada to Confront ‘Cultural Genocide’ of Residential Schools,” June 2, 2015, https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/truth-and-reconciliation-commission-urges-canada-to-confront-cultural-genocide-of-residential-schools-1.3096229.

[11] APTN National News, “Canada Guilty of Cultural Genocide Against Indigenous Peoples: TRC,” June 2, 2015, https://www.aptnnews.ca/national-news/canada-guilty-cultural-genocide-indigenous-peoples-trc-2/.

[12] Niigaan Sinclair and Sean Carleton, “Residential School Denialism Is on the Rise. What to Know,” The Tyee, June 20, 2023, https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2023/06/20/Residential-School-Denialism-On-Rise/.

[13] Statistics Canada, Indigenous Languages across Canada, Census in Brief, 2021 Census of Population: Analytical Products, 98-200-X2021012 (Ottawa, released March 29, 2023), https://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2021/as-sa/98-200-x/2021012/98-200-x2021012-eng.cfm.

[14] Julie Siebens and Tiffany Julian, Native North American Languages Spoken at Home in the United States and Puerto Rico: 2006–2010, American Community Survey Briefs ACSBR/10-10 (Washington, DC: U.S. Census Bureau, December 2011), https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/2011/acs/acsbr10-10.pdf.

How China’s initiatives are paving a new path to a better world

The following article, originally published in Xinhua, provides an overview of the four major global initiatives proposed by President Xi Jinping over the last five years – the Global Development Initiative (GDI, 2021), the Global Security Initiative (GSI, 2022), the Global Civilisation Initiative (GCI, 2023) and the Global Governance Initiative (GGI) – and discusses how these proposals link together to form a unified framework for building a community with a shared future for humanity, addressing, respectively, material development, peace and stability, cultural understanding, and institutional reform.

The article notes that UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has described the initiatives as being “totally compatible with the UN Charter” and that they have attracted broad support from countries around the world, particularly the Global South.

The piece argues that systems of international cooperation are increasingly fractured by unilateralism, sanctions, protectionism and bloc confrontation, contrasting these trends with China’s emphasis on sovereign equality, dialogue and multilateralism. It highlights deepening global crises: development is in reverse in parts of the world, the poverty gap is widening, and security tensions are intensifying. The article states that progress toward the UN’s 2030 Sustainable Development Goals has stalled: only 35 percent of targets are on track, nearly half are moving too slowly, and 18 percent have regressed. It stresses worsening global inequalities, noting the poorest half of humanity holds only 2 percent of global wealth, billions face food insecurity exacerbated by conflicts, and climate-adaptation financing gaps are growing.

The article describes the GDI as a break from Western-dominated development models, emphasising China’s long-term planning combined with market dynamism. Projects funded by the Global Development and South-South Cooperation Fund in Nepal and major infrastructure cooperation such as the China-Laos Railway are cited as examples of China “teaching a man to fish”: the Laos railway cut logistics costs by over 30 percent and created 100,000 jobs, while China-Africa Agricultural Technology Demonstration Centres increased crop yields by 30-60 percent and benefited over a million farmers. Meanwhile, China-Brazil clean-energy cooperation centres are extending power access to remote communities, linking development to ecological protection.

The Global Governance Initiative, which was announced in September this year, proposes a program of global governance reform rooted in respect for sovereign equality, international rule of law, genuine multilateralism, adherence to the principles and purposes of the UN Charter, and a people-centred focus on employment, education and healthcare. China is turning these ideas into practice by supporting reforms in multilateral institutions, expanding BRICS and SCO cooperation, promoting South-South platforms such as FOCAC (Forum on China-Africa Cooperation) and the China-CELAC Forum, and advancing new governance norms in data security, AI, and cross-border data flows. The article notes China’s increased funding to the China-UN Peace and Development Fund, and highlights the creation of the International Organisation for Mediation headquartered in Hong Kong, established with more than 30 countries, as an example of security governance via law rather than force.

Continue reading How China’s initiatives are paving a new path to a better world

Former UN under-secretary-general Erik Solheim: China is the total dominant force in the green economy

Erik Solheim, former under-secretary-general of the UN and former executive director of the UN Environment Programme, gave a presentation at the Global Times Annual Conference on 20 December 2025. He described the past year as one of global turbulence, but argued that China has emerged as a force for stability, delivering 5 percent economic growth that benefits both its people and the global economy. He highlighted China’s dominance in the green economy, noting that it leads the world in solar, wind, hydropower, electric vehicles, batteries and electric public transport, and observing that global progress in these sectors is being driven almost exclusively by China.

China is the total dominant force in the green economy. 60 percent or more of solar, wind, hydropower, electric cars, electric batteries, metros, high-speed rail, whatever you want to mention, is developed by one nation alone. That’s China…

Solheim made an important link between China’s economic success and its planning system, indicating that China’s socialist market economy is more effective in driving development – particularly sustainable development – than capitalism.

The national plan process of China is unique. No other nation is able to do this. There is a combination of a strong state with a very vibrant market, which we have seen in China since the reform and opening-up started in 1978. To do this, you need a strong state to set the targets, to make the direction, to define the goals, to take the nation in the right direction.

Solheim also discussed the role being played by the Chinese government and companies in the digital economy, particularly the orientation towards the production of open source software as a global common good.

Continue reading Former UN under-secretary-general Erik Solheim: China is the total dominant force in the green economy

Whitewashing Japanese and German war crimes paves way to new imperialist aggression

The following is a speech given by Sevim Dagdelen, foreign policy spokesperson for Germany’s Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) and a former member of the Bundestag (German parliament), to the 12th Beiing Xiangshan Forum, which took place between September 17-19, 2025.

Dagdelen begins by noting that: “The High Representative of the European Union, Kaja Kallas, declared in September 2025 that it was entirely new to her that Russia and China referred to a shared past as fighters against fascism and militarism in the Second World War. Russia and China wanted to rewrite history, and the world believed them, according to Kallas.”

She goes on to note that what is interesting is that this statement encountered no objection from the heads of state and government of Germany, France, Poland and Italy.

Having pointed out that it was the Soviet Union and China that bore the main burden of the struggle against the fascist powers joined together in the “Anti-Comintern Pact”, she adds: “That pact was complemented by the secret German-Japanese agreement of 1937. Joint plans of military intelligence aimed at dividing Central Asia and the Caucasus into German and Japanese spheres of influence.”

The attempts to deny this history are intended not only to make people forget the crimes of the Nazi regime and Japanese militarism but above all to seek a revision of the outcomes of the war.

“Germany and Japan had attempted with their imperialist wars of plunder to subjugate the USSR and China and to divide the countries. Both powers failed due to bitter anti-fascist resistance. On the ruins of the destructive works of the Third Reich and the Japanese empire, a multipolar world was to emerge, not least shaped by the national liberation struggle of colonised peoples.”

Now, “US President Donald Trump, with his punitive tariffs against India and – with qualifications – also German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, with the conclusion of the German-Japanese armaments agreement, have revealed to the world that a departure from colonialism can only be achieved against the West and its leading powers.”

“However, the global balance of power has changed fundamentally. Neither China nor Russia nor India allows its policy to be dictated any longer by Washington, Brussels, Berlin or Tokyo. The west has simply missed the rise of the Global South.”

However, the west will not simply accept this situation. Presciently, she notes: “Latin America and a claimed Western hemisphere seem to be the first focus of the US, while in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, Washington’s allies are placed in the front row to preserve US resources.”

She concludes: “We have a just world to gain. We should not let this opportunity pass.”

At its recent congress, the BSW voted to rename the party as the Alliance for Social Justice and Economic Reason, effective from October 1, 2026, while retaining the same initials. A brief report of the congress was carried by the Xinhua News Agency.

The following article was originally published by Consortium News.

The High Representative of the European Union, Kaja Kallas, declared in September 2025 that it was entirely new to her that Russia and China referred to a shared past as fighters against fascism and militarism in the second world war. Russia and China wanted to rewrite history, and the world believed them, according to Kallas.

One could dismiss this statement by one of the E.U.’s highest representatives as confused or uninformed. What is interesting, however, is that it encountered no objection from the heads of state and government of Germany, France, Poland and Italy. One must therefore understand Kallas’s historical judgment as an expression of an E.U. policy that seeks to rewrite history in order to flank the preparation for war with historical politics.

In any case, Kallas’s remark is reminiscent of the phrase by the Spanish-American philosopher George Santayana (1863-1952): “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” 

Continue reading Whitewashing Japanese and German war crimes paves way to new imperialist aggression

First Nations and Chinese migrant workers pioneered Australia-China people-to-people links

For the last nearly six months, a landmark exhibition at the National Museum of Australia in the capital Canberra has been reminding visitors that Indigenous-Chinese bonds helped forge the links between the two peoples long before the two countries established diplomatic relations in 1972.

Our Story: Aboriginal–Chinese People in Australia, is the fruit of a five-year research project led and curated by Chinese-Australian artist Zhou Xiaoping and shows how mixed heritage communities wove ties of survival and solidarity on nineteenth century goldfields and in pearling camps. Drawing on historical records and oral histories, Our Story challenges monolithic accounts of Australian history.

During the gold rushes and in industries such as pearling, railways, and agriculture (1850s–1900), Chinese labourers settled across northern Australia and many formed relationships with Aboriginal women, in the face of the White Australia policy and other racist legislation that targeted both peoples.

These families blended Chinese traditions – language, cuisine, festivals – with Aboriginal kinship and cultural practices. “I’m Aboriginal, but I’m also proud of my Chinese heritage,” says Peter Yu, whose family photographs in the exhibition tell the story of how his Hakka father and Yawuru mother raised nine children under restrictive cohabitation laws, similar to those of apartheid South Africa.

Survival often demanded ingenuity. In the 1930s, Wen Liqun registered her Larrakia stepson – her Chinese husband’s son with a Larrakia woman – as “Chinese” to shield him from the Stolen Generations. (According to Wikipedia: “The Stolen Generations [also known as Stolen Children] were the children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent who were removed from their families by the Australian federal and state government agencies and church missions, under acts of their respective parliaments. The removals of those referred to as ‘half-caste’ children were conducted in the period between approximately 1905 and 1967, although in some places mixed-race children were still being taken into the 1970s. Official government estimates are that in certain regions between one in ten and one in three Indigenous Australian children were forcibly taken from their families and communities between 1910 and 1970. The Bringing Them Home Royal Commission report [1997] described the Australian policies of removing Aboriginal children as genocide.”)

In the article published below, which was originally published on the website of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Dr. Marina Yue Zhang, an associate professor at the Australia-China Relations Institute, University of Technology Sydney (UTS: ACRI), writes:

“As the exhibition prepares to tour China in 2026, it forces a reckoning: how does a nation reconcile its suppressed histories with its multicultural present? By reconnecting with these hidden roots – embodied in everyday objects and intimate stories – Australia may yet forge its most resilient, relational partnership with China and its people.

“‘In an age of tariff wars and tech sanctions,’ says Dr. Jilda Andrews, curator of the museum, ‘Our Story isn’t just an exhibition. It’s a milestone in putting First Nations voices at the centre – creating a space for truth-telling, listening and honest conversation.’”

As the exhibition prepares to move on to China next year, readers in Australia still have until 27 January 2026 to see it at Canberra’s National Museum of Australia.

As Australia marked Reconciliation Week (27 May – 3June ), a landmark exhibition at the National Museum of Australia reminds us that Indigenous–Chinese bonds helped forge the links between the two peoples long before Canberra and Beijing formalised diplomacy in 1972.

Our Story: Aboriginal–Chinese People in Australia, a five-year research project led and curated by Chinese-Australian artist Zhou Xiaoping, uncovers a legacy of resilience and cultural fusion. Mixed-heritage communities—unwitting pioneers of people-to-people diplomacy—wove ties of survival and solidarity on 19th-century goldfields and in pearling camps. Drawing on historical records and oral histories, their stories—Our Story, the untold narratives of the nation—challenge monolithic accounts of Australian history and reveal a premodern form of “soft power.

Through videos, installations, and embedded texts in family trees and photographs, the exhibition invites contemporary Aboriginal artists to interpret these “our stories.” Together, they illuminate the accidental diplomacy of Chinese men and Aboriginal women who built communities against the odds.

Continue reading First Nations and Chinese migrant workers pioneered Australia-China people-to-people links

Wang Yi engages with Arab counterparts

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held an important telephone call with his Egyptian counterpart Badr Abdelatty on December 16 at the latter’s request.

Wang Yi said that the two sides should take the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Egypt next year as an opportunity to firmly support each other, deepen practical cooperation, strengthen coordination in multilateral affairs, elevate the China-Egypt comprehensive strategic partnership to a new level, help the Global South jointly advance modernisation and make new contributions from China and Egypt to world peace and development. China will host the second China-Arab States Summit next year. Egypt is an important member of the Arab world, and China is ready to enhance communication with Egypt to ensure the complete success of the summit. The Chinese side welcomes Egyptian leaders to China for the great event.

Badr Abdelatty briefed Wang Yi on the latest developments in the situation in Gaza, expressing Egypt’s high appreciation for China’s important proposals on resolving the Palestinian question and its announcement of a new round of assistance to Palestine. Egypt supports China in playing an important role in restoring peace and advancing reconstruction in Gaza.

Wang Yi said that the Gaza conflict has lasted for more than two years, claiming the lives of over 70,000 Palestinian civilians, and that this grave humanitarian catastrophe must be brought to an end. The current ceasefire remains fragile and the outlook is still worrying, which warrants close attention from all parties. The core is to prevent a resumption of hostilities and a repeat of the tragedy. Post-conflict governance in Gaza must be considered in conjunction with a comprehensive settlement of the Palestinian question. The principle of “Palestinians governing Palestine” must be upheld. Gaza’s future and destiny should be in the hands of the Palestinian people themselves.

He added that President Xi Jinping’s announcement of a new round of Chinese assistance to Palestine is aimed at easing the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and supporting the recovery and reconstruction in Gaza.

The call took place immediately after Wang Yi had concluded visits to three Arab countries in West Asia. He visited the United Arab Emirates (UAE) from December 12-13, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on December 14, and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan from December 14-15. In each country a joint press release was issued on Wang’s talks with his local counterpart.

In Abu Dhabi, the UAE voiced support for China in hosting the second China-Arab States Summit in 2026, and for the concurrent convening of the second China-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Summit and expressed its willingness to work with China to ensure the complete success of the summits. The Chinese side expressed its readiness to work with the UAE to promote the early conclusion of negotiations on the China-GCC Free Trade Agreement.

Both sides reaffirmed their joint commitment to achieving a comprehensive, just and lasting peace based on the two-State solution, and to establishing, in accordance with international law and relevant UN resolutions, an independent State of Palestine.

Continue reading Wang Yi engages with Arab counterparts

China at UN: The Palestinian question remains at the very heart of the Middle East issue

Chinese Ambassador to the United Nations Fu Cong addressed a UN Security Council briefing meeting on December 16.

He pointed out that: “When the Middle East is in turmoil, the world cannot be at peace. The Palestinian question remains at the very heart of the Middle East issue… While the first phase ceasefire agreement in Gaza has been reached, the prospect of peace remains distant. The historical injustices endured by the Palestinian people persist. The Palestinian question should never be marginalised.”

Fu raised four key points:

  • Over the past two months, frequent violations of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza have resulted in the death of over 300 civilians. Reaching a ceasefire agreement must entail the complete cessation of all hostilities, not merely a downgrade from intense conflict to low-intensity attacks.
  • The suffering of civilians must not continue, and urgent actions are needed to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza. Winter storms have brought heavy rains, inundating numerous temporary camps and putting hundreds of thousands of displaced people under severe threat. Israel’s continued restrictions on access to essential supplies are impeding the efforts of UNRWA [The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East] and other humanitarian agencies to deliver critical assistance. Last week, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution supporting the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, which clearly affirms Israel’s obligations as the occupying power to ensure humanitarian supplies to Gaza and to cooperate with UNRWA and other relevant agencies. China urges Israel to earnestly fulfill its obligations under international law, open all border crossings, lift access restrictions on humanitarian supplies, and support the work of the UN and other aid agencies. 
  • The situation in the West Bank must not be overlooked, and unilateral actions in violation of international law must cease immediately. The occupying power continues to advance settlement policies, demolish Palestinian homes, and condone settler violence, resulting in massive civilian casualties and displacement. Settlement activities violate international law and Council Resolution 2334, leading to the shrinkage of Palestinian living space and eroding the foundations of the two-State solution.
  • Justice and fairness must prevail, and the two-State solution must be implemented without delay. Implementing the two-State solution and establishing an independent state of Palestine is the only viable path to resolving the Palestinian question. Any arrangements concerning Gaza’s future must be guided by the principle of Palestinians governing Palestine. Any attempt to alter Gaza’s territorial or demographic composition must be firmly rejected. The international community must redouble its efforts to advance the two-State solution, support the early establishment of an independent state of Palestine, and facilitate its full membership in the UN. 

In conclusion, he reiterated:

“China firmly supports the just cause of the Palestinian people in restoring their legitimate national rights. Recently, President Xi Jinping has on multiple occasions, comprehensively articulated China’s position and proposals for resolving the Palestinian question and announced that China will provide 100 million US dollars in assistance to Palestine to help alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and support its recovery and reconstruction. China will continue to work with the international community to promote a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire in Gaza, alleviate the humanitarian crisis, and make unremitting efforts towards a comprehensive, just, and lasting solution to the Palestinian question at an early date.”

The following article was originally published on the website of China’s Permanent Mission to the UN.

President,

I wish to begin by expressing our condolences to the victims of the mass shooting in Sydney, Australia, and expressing our solidarity with the bereaved families and those injured. I thank Deputy Special Coordinator Ramiz Alakbarov for his briefing. 

When the Middle East is in turmoil, the world cannot be at peace. The Palestinian question remains at the very heart of the Middle East issue. The latest outbreak of the Gaza conflict has brought unimaginable suffering to both Palestinian and Israeli civilians and triggered severe spillover effects across the Middle East. While the first phase ceasefire agreement in Gaza has been reached, the prospect of peace remains distant. The historical injustices endured by the Palestinian people persist. The Palestinian question should never be marginalized. The international community must further build consensus and take more proactive actions to advance a political solution. 

Continue reading China at UN: The Palestinian question remains at the very heart of the Middle East issue

How the US lost its chip war on China

The following article by Gary Wilson, originally published in Struggle La Lucha, argues that the United States has effectively lost its attempt to contain China’s rise and preserve US monopoly control over advanced technology through semiconductor export controls. The Trump administration’s recent decision to allow renewed exports of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips to China, albeit with restrictions and fees, is a tacit admission that the chip war has failed. “The chip war did not revive US industry. It exposed its fragility.”

Tracing the origins of the chip war to the Obama-era Pivot to Asia, the article situates semiconductor restrictions within a broader strategy of military, economic, and technological containment. Under Trump and Biden, this evolved into an aggressive weaponisation of global supply chains, using export controls, sanctions and alliance pressure to block China’s access to advanced chips, manufacturing tools and software ecosystems.

Gary observes that China’s response was decisive and systematic. Through long-term state planning, and integration of AI into production and infrastructure, Chinese firms – Huawei in particular – have made rapid advances in domestic hardware and systems design. By compensating for individual chip inferiority with massive, coordinated clusters, China narrowed performance gaps and accelerated technological self-reliance. Export controls, instead of halting progress, intensified China’s drive toward technological sovereignty.

The fallout has been global. US reshoring efforts have yielded little fruit thus far; the US’s allies have been forced to absorb substantial losses, and trust in US-controlled supply chains has reached an all-time low. Allowing Nvidia exports is therefore essentially a retreat aimed at preserving residual influence through software dependence. The article concludes that monopoly enforcement has reached its limits: coercion cannot replace production, and the era of US-dictated technological dominance is ending.

Imperialist monopoly capitalism cannot outplan a system organized for long-term development. Coercion cannot substitute for production. Sanctions cannot replace planning… What comes next will not be decided by chips alone. It will be decided by which social system can organise production, labor, and technology to meet real needs over time. On that terrain, the chip war has already delivered its verdict.

When the White House quietly approved renewed exports of Nvidia’s H200 AI accelerators to China — with a 25% fee attached — it marked more than a policy adjustment. It marked the effective collapse of Washington’s semiconductor containment strategy. 

After years of escalating export controls, sanctions, and alliance pressure, the United States is now conceding what the chip war made clear: China cannot be technologically frozen, and U.S. monopoly control over advanced technology is no longer enforceable.

Continue reading How the US lost its chip war on China

China backs Venezuela’s call for emergency session of UN Security Council

On the same day as US President Donald Trump declared a “total and complete” blockade of Venezuela and brazenly threatened to seize the country’s land and oil (Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves), Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held a telephone conversation with his Venezuelan counterpart Yván Gil at the latter’s request.

Gil stressed that the Venezuelan government and people will firmly safeguard the country’s sovereignty and independence, resolutely defend their legitimate rights and interests, and will not accept threats from any bullying power.

Wang said that that mutual trust and support are a longstanding tradition of China-Venezuela relations. China opposes all forms of unilateral bullying and supports countries in safeguarding their sovereignty and national dignity.

The following day, December 18, at the regular Foreign Ministry press conference in Beijing, spokesperson Guo Jiakun expressed China’s support for Venezuela’s call for an emergency session of the UN Security Council to discuss the situation. In response to questions from the Japanese broadcaster NHK and the Reuters news agency, he stated:

“China opposes all acts of unilateralism and bullying and supports countries in defending their sovereignty and national dignity. Venezuela has the right to independently develop mutually beneficial cooperation with other countries. We believe the international community can understand and support Venezuela’s stance of protecting its own legitimate rights and interests. China supports Venezuela’s request for holding an emergency session of the UN Security Council.”

The following article was originally published by Global Times.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Wednesday held a phone conversation with Venezuela’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yván Gil, at the latter’s request, according to a readout published by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Gil briefed Wang on the current domestic situation in Venezuela, stressing that the Venezuelan government and people will firmly safeguard the country’s sovereignty and independence, resolutely defend their legitimate rights and interests, and will not accept threats from any bullying power.

Wang, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, said that China and Venezuela are strategic partners, and that mutual trust and support are a longstanding tradition of China-Venezuela relations. China opposes all forms of unilateral bullying and supports countries in safeguarding their sovereignty and national dignity. 

Venezuela has the right to independently develop mutually beneficial cooperation with other countries, and it is believed that the international community understands and supports Venezuela’s position in defending its own legitimate rights and interests, said Wang. 

The Jimmy Lai case is none of your business – China rebuffs British interference

China has reacted firmly to the attempts by Britain and a number of other Western countries to interfere in the case of Jimmy Lai. A chief instigator of riots and violent turmoil in Hong Kong in 2019-20, in active collusion with foreign forces, the former proprietor of the now defunct Apple Daily was on, December 15, found guilty in the High Court of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on two counts of conspiring to collude with external forces and of conspiracy to publish seditious materials. He will be sentenced at a later date.

On 15 December, Chinese Ambassador to the UK Zheng Zeguang met with a senior official of the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) to lodge solemn representations over the UK side’s statement that made irresponsible remarks on the Hong Kong High Court’s guilty verdict in the case. He urged the UK to abandon its colonial mindset, immediately stop interfering in Hong Kong’s judicial affairs, stop meddling in China’s internal affairs, and stop making the case for anti-China rioters bent on destabilising Hong Kong.

Ambassador Zheng described the British actions as a gross interference in China’s internal affairs, which tramples on the spirit of the rule of law, and seriously violates the basic norms governing international relations. China firmly opposes this and condemns it in the strongest terms.

“Facts have fully proven that Jimmy Lai was the primary planner and participant in a series of anti-China riots in Hong Kong, a pawn of external anti-China forces, and the instigator behind the turbulence over the amendment bill in 2019. What he did was by no means ‘peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression’, as claimed by the UK side. Lai is a Chinese citizen, and China has never recognised dual nationality.

“The UK’s colonial rule over Hong Kong ended long ago, and the UK is in no position and has no right to point fingers at or interfere in Hong Kong affairs. Any attempt by the UK to interfere in Hong Kong’s judicial affairs will only further expose its malicious intent to destabilise Hong Kong, will only provoke society-wide indignation in Hong Kong, and will get nowhere. China urges the UK to immediately stop interfering in Hong Kong’s judicial affairs and China’s internal affairs, stop making the case for anti-China rioters bent on destabilising Hong Kong, and stop going further down the wrong path.”

Additionally, a statement issued by the Chinese Embassy noted that: “On 15 December, the UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper issued a statement, which made irresponsible remarks on the conviction of Jimmy Lai and smeared the National Security Law for Hong Kong. This blatantly interferes in China’s internal affairs and tramples on the rule of law and seriously violates the basic norms governing international relations. We strongly oppose and condemn such an unjustified move by the UK side.”

Lai “publicly begged foreign countries to impose sanctions on China and the Hong Kong SAR, brazenly proclaimed ‘fighting for the US,’ colluded with ‘Hong Kong independence’ and ‘violent riots’ organisations as well as foreign forces, abused media tools to incite hatred and intensify confrontation, and drummed up support for violent activities, in an attempt to destabilise Hong Kong and pursue a ‘colour revolution.’… Lai’s doing was by no means what the UK side claimed to be ‘peacefully’ exercising his right to freedom of expression.”

It added that: “Hong Kong has long returned to China and British colonial rule in Hong Kong has been put to an end long ago. Hong Kong-related affairs are purely China’s internal affairs. The UK is in no position and has no right to point fingers at or interfere in Hong Kong-related affairs. The UK side’s attempt to interfere in Hong Kong’s judicial affairs will only further expose its sinister motive to destabilise Hong Kong.”

Continue reading The Jimmy Lai case is none of your business – China rebuffs British interference