10 juil. 2010

Where is the "real" National Palace Museum?

Dans le jardin du NPM
A quand les trésors de Taipei de retour à Beijing ? Cette année ?

Pékin et Taiwan collaborent à un projet sur les trésors impériaux

Extraits:
  • "Deux musées « rivaux », le Musée national du Palais de Pékin et celui de Taipei collaborent à un projet de recherches pour retracer le parcours de milliers de trésors impériaux de la Chine pendant les troubles des années 1930 et 1940."
  • "Les deux musées se sont associés pour organiser une exposition commune à Beijing d’ici la fin 2010 pour présenter la véritable odyssée de cette collection. Une autre exposition sur la peinture de la dynastie des Yuan est prévue en juillet 2011 si les relations diplomatiques entre Beijing et Taiwan le permettent. Taiwan demande un engagement formel de Beijing de ne pas saisir les objets prêtés par le musée de Taipei."

Heu, rien à voir avec le musée cette photo - mais j'aime bien !

Chérie, je ne retrouve plus mon ECFA !


C'est l'histoire d'un parti politique qui a fait un bel ECFA et qui ne veut pas le montrer à personne.Ni à l'opposition, ni au peuple. Par contre, au WTO, ça va. Alors les taiwanais en sont réduits à attendre la traduction en anglais de gens qui ne sont même pas capables de dire Taiwan, puisqu'ils prononcent "Chinese Taipei". Aie!

Chapitre 12 : Alors : Faut-il faire confiance au WTO pour retranscrire fidèlement l'ECFA ? 


Extraits :
  • "[WTO ­Director-General Pascal Lamy ] invariably referred to [Taiwan] as “Chinese Taipei.” He did not even use Taiwan’s official name as a WTO member, the (admittedly tongue-twisting) Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu, or a more convenient shorthand, such as Republic of China."
  • "The “Chinese Taipei” designation is obviously a concession on the part of the WTO to please Beijing, and raises questions about the world body’s ability to properly “review” the ECFA documents that, once translated into English, Taipei and Beijing will be submitting to it."
Taiwan et la Corée du Sud, dans une course économique concurrentielle:

Voici un article très intéressant, comparant les économies de Taiwan et de la Corée du Sud, montrant notamment que la Corée du Sud dépassa Taiwan en 2004, et que Taiwan espère repasser en tête avec l'ECFA :


Extraits :
  • "Among the four Asian tigers, Taiwan and South Korea have similar industrial development patterns, both promoting the manufacturing sector, while Hong Kong and Singapore are city-state economies, with more service-oriented economies."
  • "Before the Asian financial crisis in 1997, Taiwan surpassed South Korea in economic growth, industrial development, and living standards. However, since 1997, South Korea has outperformed Taiwan by building up super brand names like Samsung, LG and others. In 2000, South Korea’s per capita GDP was only 77 percent of Taiwan’s. The two were tied in 2004. But in 2007 the Koreans enjoyed a 26 percent higher GDP than the Taiwanese."
ECFA apparaitrait comme mutuellement bénéfique, la souveraineté de Taiwan n'aurait pas été blessée par l'ECFA:
 
Voici un avis interessant :


Extraits:
  • "Judging from the results, Taiwan managed to look good, while mainland China succeeding in getting what it wanted."
  • "the mainland gave virtually no ground on the items it wanted to protect. An evaluation of the accord shows that the contents of the early harvest list are actually mutually beneficial."
  • "The “framework” of the ECFA is very similar to that of the Framework Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Cooperation (ASEAN Plus One) that mainland China signed with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in November 2002. The opposition’s claim that the ECFA reduces the status of the ROC is completely unfounded."
  • "Under the principles of the World Trade Organization, the two signatories to the ECFA are equal WTO members, while ASEAN Plus One was concluded on a nation-to-nation basis."
  • "it is meaningless to compare the value of tariff reductions, revenue losses, number of items or their value. Instead, one must look at how reducing tariffs to zero will help individual sectors on the list expand their operations, increase their market share across the strait and stimulate their domestic employment."
  • "The success of the early harvest list depends less on businesspeople’s degree of satisfaction than on their ability to adapt to it."
  • "Many sectors that fought hard for inclusion, such as petrochemicals and machinery, were disappointed with the early harvest list. The petrochemical products that made it onto the list are mostly low-tariff, high-polluting low-end ones, while the most competitive high-end computer-controlled machine tools did not make it at all."
  • "Due to conflicts with the mainland’s industrial policies, most of the “six emerging industries” promoted by Taiwan (high-end agriculture, green energy, medicine and health care, biotechnology, culture and creation, and tourism) failed to make the list as well."
Pour se détendre un peu : Rigolons une minute (seconde?) avec la Propagande anti-ECFA 


Pendant ce temps-là, ça se prépare en Chine :


Extrait :
  • the provincial government is working to develop a Western Taiwan Straits Economic Zone, a national pilot economic zone for cross-Straits exchange and cooperation.
Chapitre 13 : Est-ce que le peuple taiwanais est satisfait de la signature de l'ECFA ?

C'est une bonne question, merci de l'avoir posée, et d'y répondre :

Extraits :
  • "Analysis: A week after historic pact, many Taiwanese worry that they did the wrong thing. Is it a vitamin, or a poison pill?"
  • "A week after China and Taiwan signed a landmark trade deal binding their economies closer, Taiwanese can't decide if they've been thrown an economic life-line or, as one paper put it, signed a political "suicide note." And that's the experts."
  • "Strange to say, it was signed by two countries who don't recognize each other's existence. In fact, they're technically still in a state of hostilities. China covets self-ruled Taiwan and has some 1,300 missiles piled up across from the island as a reminder it shouldn't be naughty (i.e., make a formal, permanent break with the mainland.)"
  • "China's claim is long-standing. But instead of bellicose threats, Beijing has  begun using the honey of economic enticements to catch the fly. ECFA's terms heavily favor Taiwan, with tariff reductions on 539 Taiwanese exports to China versus just 267 Chinese exports to Taiwan. In other words, it's a big, fat dollop of honey."
  • "they worry about over-dependence. Already, some 35 percent of Taiwan's exports go to China; after the deal some say that percentage could rise to 45 percent or even 50 percent. "That ratio's too high — it's dangerous," said Hwang Jen-te, an economist at National Chengchi University. "It will endanger Taiwan's economic security; we have to consider this."

      8 juil. 2010

      ECFA - Mais que faire pour fêter le centenaire, ma chérie ?


      Chapitre 10 : Interessant cet article :


      Extraits dans la presse :
      • "Beijing looks to WTO meeting to open Taiwan to Chinese investment"
      • "China's attention has shifted to Taiwan's restrictions on Chinese investment."
      • "China is expected to ask Taiwan to open its doors wider to Chinese investors during a World Trade Organization (WTO) trade policy review (TPR) meeting slated for July 5 and July 7 in Geneva [...]."
      • "China has also expressed great interest in Taiwan's six major emerging industries for priority development, including biotech, green energy, medical care, culture and creativity, tourism and high-end agriculture."

      Une nouvelle à laquelle on n'ose croire :

      Extraits:
      • China [...] willing to let Taiwan negotiate trade pacts with the outside world [...].
      • China [...] will let Taiwan sign free trade agreements with major trading partners via the World Trade Organisation, removing an obstacle to a plank in the $390 billion island economy's long-term growth strategy.
      • [...] as a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Taiwan could pursue pacts with other member economies, sidestepping the issue of sovereignty.
      D'un autre côté, le cadre WTO existait déjà pour Taiwan, alors est-ce juste que les autres pays auraient eu "peur" de la Chine autrement. Finalement, est-ce que tout cela n'est pas encore qu'une comédie ?

      Est-ce seulement un bluff pour que le parlement ne fasse pas d'histoires, et approuve l'accord ou soit-disant "traité" sans l'analyser en détail ?? 
      Une autre nouvelle sous-entend qu'il y aurait une "menace" sur les fameux FTA potentiels, dans le cas où le parlement n'approuverait pas les (deux ?) accords ???

      Tiens, il faut que j'achête le DVD :

      Formosa Betrayed coming to theaters in Taiwan By The Peking Duck - global blogger, July 6, 2010

      Extraits - Please go to read the whole excellent text by "The Peking Duck" :
      • "On August 6, the 2009 thriller Formosa Betrayed will be seen for the first time in Taiwan, about two weeks after it becomes available here on DVD."
      • "I had to smile when, early on in the film, Agent Kelly checks into a Taiwan hotel and is handed the keys to Room No. 228. It’s a shame that just about no one knows what 228 is, about how on that day, February 28, 1947, an incident took place that would unleash the full savagery of the Chiang Kai Shek regime, resulting in the wanton slaughter of as many as 30,000 innocent Taiwanese citizens. It was a tragedy that makes Tiananmen look trivial. It is shocking that it remains unknown. But to Taiwan’s credit, it is a great weight on the nation’s conscience, and everyone there knows about it."
      • "There is a propaganda element to this movie, which is clearly an advocate for Taiwanese independence. It makes the point that Taiwan has been exploited for centuries, ruled by the Japanese and then by Chiang (at first welcomed as a hero), and that the fate of the island was then put into jeopardy by the US’s recognition of the PRC. Shouldn’t this country, the film shouts at you, be allowed to be independent?"

      Cette nouvelle me fait très peur :

      Le futur hub du tourisme médical taiwanais sera installé à Taoyuan

      Extraits :
      • "des domaines aussi pointus que la reconstruction cranio-faciale, les greffes d'organes, les chirurgies cardiovasculaires et la reproduction artificielle"
      • "une procédure d'immigration simplifiée pour les patients non ressortissants de Taiwan"
      Et cette définition à réfléchir :
      • "Tourisme médical : tourisme dont le but principal est d'obtenir des soins de santé à plus bas prix que ceux offerts dans son pays ou d'avoir accès à des pratiques médicales qui y sont interdites."
      La Chine en rêve depuis des années. j'espère que Taiwan n'aura jamais à le regretter (??).

      Le premier des "nouveaux FTA" ? :

      Taiwan is on the way of FTA with Thailand, Taiwan News, 2010-07-08

      Extraits :
      • "Taiwan’s investors treat Thailand as the third most attractive market only next to the US and the European Union"
      • "As the center of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Thailand, a nation with a population of more than 630 million, is an important market with opportunities."
      • "Thailand is Taiwan’s 13th largest trading partner last year. For Thailand, Taiwan is its 12th largest trading partner and the 18th largest export market."
      • "According to statistics, Taiwan invests a total of more than US$12.5 billion in a wide range of industries including electricity, metal, mechanics, chemistry and paper."
      On y croit.

      Les problèmes entre Taiwan et Japon continuent :

      Après les récents problèmes qui avaient amené le représentant du Japon à Taiwan à démissionner, créant une situation navrante clairement imputable au président taiwanais, voici du nouveau, juste avant la signature de l'ECFA:

      Japan doesent trust Taiwan anymore,Japan takes a shot at China- via Taiwan By Jens Kastner and Wang Jyh-Perng, Asia Times Online Ltd.

      Extraits :
      • "Japan has extended its Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) near Taiwan in the East China Sea [...]."
      • "To [Members of Taiwan's opposition], the affair signifies that Japan doesn't trust Taiwan anymore."
      • "From a Japanese perspective, China has been challenging Japan's interests in the East China Sea in ever-shorter intervals."
      • "Japan's extension of its ADIZ is to be seen in the context of the complicated East China Sea sovereignty disputes."
      • "The problems with the Japanese aren't new, and they have always been raised by the Taiwanese. However, under Taiwan's administrations that were pro-Japanese, there was no urgent need to solve them."

      Chapitre 11 : Debut de revue de ECFA au parlement - 1 minute devrait suffire au KMT, sans doute ?

      Un article très clair du Taiwan News (comme très souvent) :

      Mais le KMT annonce en début de session le passage du texte en seconde lecture - donc pas de discussion (!!!) - donc une belle bagarre à la clé (de toute façon tout le monde s'y attendait).

      Excellent article encore, car il pose le problème de fond :
      Extraits très intéressants :
      • "Nevertheless, many citizens wonder why Ma and the KMT leadership feel that it is necessary to adopt legislative "majority violence" to secure the passage of the ECFA and its related legal revisions."
      • "With 74 of 113 seats compared to the DPP's 33 slots, the KMT holds an overwhelming majority and need have no fear that passage of the ECFA would not be endangered from article by article review or discussion."
      • "Surely one objective is to short-circuit the real possibility that an extended article by article review of the vaguely worded ECFA would reveal to our citizens just how much the pact has compromised "the people's interests" and denigrated "Taiwan's dignity.""
      On le sait bien que pour le KMT, la démocratie est une gène à balayer.  

      En tout cas, à les voir, on peut imaginer une guerre civile un jour.

      Avec peut-être la violence de : 艋舺 / MONGA - from YouTube

      Et pour le centenaire, alors, que faire ?

      Le centenaire de la ROC arrive donc ...

      Dans cet article :

      Taipei Times écrivait :

      • [...] if a cross-strait economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) is signed, Taiwan will move even faster toward China. The 100th anniversary of the ROC’s founding may well be its farewell.
      Et si l'ECFA, c'était le cadeau de la ROC à la RPC ?

      En tout cas, l'anniversaire de la ROC n'est pas donné pour tous : 

       Ce sont des bugs de cent ans, et la note promet d'être salée.