Tag: china

  • Nigeria seeks duty-free cassava export to China

    Talks are  ongoing between Nigeria and China for the removal of current five per cent export duty placed on cassava export from Nigeria.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbe, who spoke at the Third Ogun State Investors’ Forum, yesterday, said although there is a high demand for Nigeria’s cassava, especially in China, the high cost of transportation of the commodity from the hinterland to Lagos, enroute China, has made it less profitable.

    “Transportation of exports to China is expensive because of the distance  from here. So if we can get the Chinese government to remove the five per cent duty placed on Nigerian cassava, then that will be encouraging for farmers,” he said.

    Ogbe expressed optimism that the discussion will sails through, especially since the same waiver was granted Thailand on cassava export to China.

    “Nigerian cassava has been proven to be of higher and better quality than that of Thailand. So I am hopeful that China will grant us waiver on the commodity because this will further boost our export capacity of same to the Asia country,” he said.

  • GM China sales rose, Ford’s fell in April

    Despite worries that China’s economy is growing at a slower pace and last year’s volatility in China’s stock markets, demand remains strong, especially in the so-called second-tier cities with populations of less than 5 million.

    Automakers are reporting strong sales of SUVs. General Motors’ posted a 7.5 per cent sales increase in April over a year earlier for its China joint ventures, while Ford’s sales fell 11 per cent last month in the world’s largest auto market.

    GM’s largest brand in China, rose 56 per cent from April 2015 to 98,992, led by the Excelle GT sedan and Envision SUV, which will be introduced in the U.S. this summer.

    Cadillac, which is still relatively new in China, posted a 13 per cent sales increase to 7,007, as it launched the new CT6 fullsize sedan in late January.

    Chevrolet sales in China fell 29 per cent to 35,431. Sales of the Baojun brand rose 56 per cent to 37,915, while Wuling sales slipped 14 per cent to 98,580, as demand softened for small commercial vans.

    Ford sold a total of 82,324 vehicles through its Changan Ford and Jiangling Motors joint ventures, along with vehicles imported from other markets, compared with 92,406 in April 2015.

    Ford’s SUVs continues to sell well in China, including the Ford Ecosport, Kuga, Edge, Explorer and Everest. Ford introduced the new Kuga and the Edge V6 at the recent Beijing Auto Expo.

    Despite the decline in April sales, sales for the first four months of 2016 of Ford’s joint ventures and imports in China are 6.7 per cent higher than a year ago.

  • Six dead in China coal mine explosion

    A report on Wednesday in Beijing has confirmed the death of six miners that were trapped in a coal mine after a blast in south-west China’s Yunnan province.

    It stated that the explosion in Shaba Coal Mine occurred on Wednesday morning in Yanjin County.

    It said it was still not clear how many people were injured or trapped, but authorities were investigating the cause of the accident.

    The report noted that China had improved its mine safety record in recent years through the closure of thousands of small operations.

    It, however, said that in spite of improved standards, the industry was regarded as one of the most dangerous in the world, with recurring mishaps including flooding, explosions and fire outbreaks.

     

  • What Nigeria, Africa can gain  from China

    What Nigeria, Africa can gain from China

    Is Nigeria right to look up to China for economic succour? Immediate past British Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills Sir Vince Cable, in a paper delievered at the Africa Today summit in Abuja last week, laid bare what Nigeria and Africa stand to gain from its relationship with China.
    Below is the full text of his paper:

     

    China’s rapid emergence (or re-emergence) as an economic super power has caused controversy in Africa as in the UK and elsewhere.  The former governor of the Nigerian Central Bank, Lamido Sanusi, has talked about “a new form of imperialism”.  But others, perhaps more cynically, take the view that this is a band wagon Africa should be on; Victor Kasongo, former mining minister of the Congo observed “if China wants to dominate the world, it is not our business to stop them”.  The Chinese, themselves, seem anxious to play down the difficulties; the foreign minister, Wang Yi, says “we absolutely will not take the old path of western colonialists” while the prime minister, Li Keqiang acknowledges “growing pains”.

    Revealingly the African public take a very positive view of the Chinese; 70% according to the Pew Global Attitude Survey last year, as against 40% in Europe and 57% in the rest of Asia.  And most objective academic studies of the impact of Chinese trade and investment in Africa have been positive, though they were conducted before the collapse of commodity prices caused primarily by the Chinese economic slowdown.

    I approach this issue in a neutral frame of mind.  I have been involved with, and supportive of, African development for half a century: my first professional job was in the Treasury, the Finance Ministry, in post-independent Kenya.  We didn’t see much of the Chinese then, though they built a railway in neighbouring Tanzania, to the Zambia border, which sadly failed to generate the traffic and the development expected of it.  I visited Nigeria several times in the 1990’s, during the rule of the military dictator Abacha, and had the dubious honour of presenting to him Shell’s Nigeria scenarios which I had developed as the Group’s Chief Economist.  My pessimistic scenario, the Road to Kinshasa, caused considerable upset amongst the Presidents’ aides, though it seemed plausible at the time.  I am pleased to note that modern Nigeria is a different country: democratic, much reformed and more optimistic.

    I was also, until my party lost office a year ago, responsible in the Coalition government as Secretary of State for the UK’s trade and business policy and I took a positive view of China’s role.  We welcomed Chinese investment in the UK even in sensitive fields like telecommunications and nuclear power.  China has become the main source of overseas students in UK universities.  And we gave top priority to building trade links with China and India.  It is important to be tough where there has been ‘unfair’ trade practice – as with the alleged ‘dumping’ of Chinese surplus steel  – but, overall, I see trade and investment links with China as, on balance, a force for good.  Following the visit of President Buhari to China I can see that the same essentially positive assessment has been made here.  I am sure that is right but we need to examine the criticisms including from Nigerians who fear that the relationship is one-sided and not obviously beneficial to Nigeria.

    What surprises me about the debate in Africa is that people are surprised by the growing role of China.  After all, China is now an economic superpower comparable in scale to the USA (and on some measures is bigger economically), with India now number 3 in the league table ahead of Japan and Germany.  Of course, if we treat the EU as a unit, it dominates the world economy, but it isn’t yet – to my regret – a unit.  As an economic superpower China is returning to a position it occupied in the centuries before the UK, then wider European, industrial revolution: the world’s dominant economy and trading power (followed by India).

    China isn’t just, any longer, an inward looking economic superpower.  Following the reforms introduced by Deng, incorporating key elements of a capitalist economy, and opening China to foreign investors and to liberalised trade, China has experienced not only a remarkable transformation in living standards but has made a massive impact on the world economy.  It is the world’s largest exporter – mainly manufactures- and importer of raw materials and capital goods.  And its excess of savings over (very high levels of) investment has spilled over into the rest of the world.  Many of the defining phenomena of the world economy in the last two decades originate in China: the disinflation in manufacturing prices and arguably the compression of wages in rich countries as a result; the boom in commodity prices notwithstanding economic weakness in the developed world; the flood of capital into western banks pre-crisis looking for high yields in highly leveraged lending.  And more recently the sharp fall in oil and commodity prices generally.

    The impact on Africa is reflected most obviously in the growth of trade. Two way trade flows (China and sub-Saharan Africa) increased from a miniscule $1bn in 1980 to $10bn in 2000, $114bn in 2010 and $169bn in 2015. China is by some way Africa’s largest export market ahead of the EU. Nigeria specifically imports more from China than from its second and third largest suppliers- USA and India- combined (though Nigeria exports little in return).  The growth of China and Africa’s exports to China is credited with at least some of the acceleration of African growth-from 0.6% per capita in the 1990’s to 2.8% in the 2000’s- though improved economic policy in Africa and better governance must have been the dominant factor.

    On the other hand, various claims are made about the negative role of China in African development.  Some careful analysis by, among others, Deborah Braugtigam, has shown some of these claims to be, at best, only partially accurate.  The most substantial of these is that China’s main interest in Africa is raw material extraction.  Up to a point this is true.  85% of Africa’s exports to China by value are of oil or other raw materials though the latest figures will be lower because of falling commodity prices..  The share of agricultural produce has fallen sharply by contrast (from 12 to 6% over a decade).  But the interest in raw materials is not unique to China; the pattern of trade with the US and the EU is similar.

    But there is another side to this story.  Although there are some important and well publicised mining projects involving Chinese state or private companies -Sicomines in the DRC featuring iron ore and cobalt; the CNPC gas project in Mozambique; the Sinopec investment in oil production in Angola- the overall profile of Chinese investments is quite different, Under a third of Chinese direct investment in Africa is in the natural resource sector. Around 16% is in construction including infrastructure projects quite separate from the mining sector; indeed there appears to be a conscious effort to use China’s formidable capacity to execute large infrastructure projects efficiently and quickly at a time when demand for such projects is weakening in China itself.  Around 15% of investment is in manufacturing including, in Nigeria, building materials, ceramics, steel recycling and telecommunications as with Huawei.  Again, the slowdown in China is creating a demand for manufacturing opportunities overseas.  And In Nigeria around 60% of Chinese investment is in services.

    The worse that can be said is that African exports to China perpetuate a traditional, commodity based, structure of trade.  While this has helped to fuel a major boom in extractive industries it has also left many African economies vulnerable to commodity price volatility and, as now, seriously depressed markets when Chinese demand slows. The vulnerability is also two-way.  China has to organise evacuation of its nationals from the ill-fated oil developments in Southern Sudan on top of the disastrous collapse of oil interests in Libya.

    There is less substance to the claim that the Chinese are involved in a giant ‘land grab’ mainly for supplying Chinese markets.  There are some examples of major Chinese investment in countries, like Zambia and DRC, which have welcomed foreign investors in commercial agriculture.  But Brautigam found that the claims were greatly exaggerated.  Of the 15 million acres of land reportedly acquired only 700,000 had actually happened and none were for export to the Chinese market.

    There is also little evidence that the Chinese invariably use Chinese nationals on their projects.  There are some examples of large numbers of Chinese workers involved in big infrastructure projects and some African governments have welcomed them (as in Angola).  But a survey by Sautman and Hairong of 400 Chinese companies in 40 African countries found that over 80% of workers were local.  Senior management and technical personnel were often Chinese – to a greater extent than in most western companies – but there is a general understanding of the need for localisation and there are several cases, in Ethiopia particularly, of exemplary investor behaviour.  And where Chinese workers or sub-contractors have behaved illegally, as in mining ventures in Ghana and Zambia, the host governments have been able to take appropriate action. This said, Howard French has identified around 1 million Chinese now living and working in Africa and some worry-perhaps needlessly- that there are parallels with earlier European settlement.

    Another myth relates to the scale of Chinese activities.  Although China looms very large in terms of trade and is a rapidly growing source of foreign investment its stock of foreign investment in Africa is only around 5% of the total.  It has an embryonic and rapidly growing aid programme but it accounts for only around 4% of development assistance to Africa (but 12% of commercial loans).  Much higher figures are flying around but these tend to be compilations of newspaper stories aggregating official announcements and communiqués and these figures are largely meaningless. The $6bn loan offered by China to Nigeria during President Buhari’s visit is a line of credit which will only be drawn upon as viable projects emerge.  The terms appear to be more generous than market borrowing at present in sovereign debt markets but less generous than, say, loans from the World Bank’s IDA facility for low-income countries

    The evidence also suggests that flows of Chinese capital to Africa go to much the same places as western capital: to large markets (Nigeria, South Africa, Ethiopia) and national resource wealth (Nigeria again, Angola, DRC). They are largely profit driven reflecting the commercial nature of most Chinese state as well as private entities. If there is a difference it is that Chinese investors are more likely to venture into countries where there is judged to be political stability but the rule of law and property rights are weak – DRC, Angola, Zimbabwe – and where standards of governance are generally poor.  This may be in part because that is the environment in which companies operate in China itself and partly because Chinese entities have the implicit or explicit backing of the Chinese state while western companies have to worry more about contractual risk, challenges from shareholders and NGO campaigners.  These considerations help to explain why Chinese investment in Africa is relatively high in relation to investment in western countries (China has more investment in Africa than in the USA); though it must be said that with some exceptions, like the UK, Chinese investors have been treated with suspicion in the West, especially in sectors like telecoms and energy.  There is some evidence that Chinese companies struggle however to cope with environments in which robust legal and democratic processes are unexpectedly strong in Africa, as in the fierce defence of land holdings on the line of the China-built railway in Kenya, and this may prove a problem in Nigeria.

    A more general but related point is that Chinese traders and investors are often accused of exploiting weak governance to tolerate or generate corruption, especially in big national resource contracts and to undermine the protection of endangered species and sustainable timber certification.  This trend may however merely be a matter of time as Chinese entities adjust to global norms and seek to build global brand reputation.  China has recently played a positive role in a package of measures designed to stop the flow of ivory to China.  And in some major global governance issues, like climate change, China has been much more constructive than – say – India or Saudi Arabia. Nonetheless in countries where there is a growing appetite for transparency, as in Nigeria, Chinese companies may well find that there is a serious challenge to their traditional ways of working.

    There is one particular sensitivity which is the role of Chinese manufacturing exports in undermining fledgling industrial sectors in countries like Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa.  The current adjustment in China away from growth based on investment and export demand rather than domestic consumption has created serious problems of surplus capacity in Chinese manufacturing resulting in attempts to off-load these products onto world markets often at very low prices.  There is considerable tension at present in the EU, especially the UK, and the USA over Chinese steel.  In African markets attention is focussed, rather more, on textiles and footwear. In Nigeria, trades unions and manufacturers complain bitterly of tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of jobs lost mainly in the garments industry. It may be that Chinese imports are simply the scapegoat for poor economic policy which perpetuates, for example, a seriously over-valued currency as is currently the case in Nigeria where the ‘curse of oil’ is particularly debilitating for agriculture and industry.  But the politics are toxic.

    There are several mitigating factors.  The first is that while workers may be threatened by import competition, millions of consumers, many of them poor, will benefit from access to cheap imports.  Research on a variety of sectors threatened by Chinese imports suggests that the Chinese prices were, on average, around a half of the prices of local producers.  Where African governments do respond by (hopefully) temporary tariff measures, it may be possible to attract Chinese firms to invest in Africa creating employment locally.

    When we look at these factors taken together it is clear that the impact of China on African development is often exaggerated in scale and that the negative rhetoric is based, at least in part, on myth.

    Nonetheless, China’s emergence or re-emergence, as an economic superpower has major implications for Africa not least because Africa is a major commodity exporter.  When China is the motor driving along the world economy, Africa is pulled along.  (To mix my metaphors) when China sneezes, Africa catches cold, as is happening now.  Like the rest of the world Africa’s immediate future depends critically on China’s ability to manage its currently challenging policy dilemmas around debt, the exchange rate and sectoral adjustment on a massive scale.  Plausible modelling suggests that every 1% movement in Chinese growth, up or down, has a 0.5% growth impact on Africa.  So the slowdown in Chinese annual growth from 10% to 6% cuts African growth from 6% to 4%.  The lesson is clear.  For Africa’s sake, and the rest of us, we must hope that China is successful in stabilising, rebalancing and growing its economy.

     

  • ‘Why China sends inferior products to Nigeria’

    ‘Why China sends inferior products to Nigeria’

    World-renowned expert on China’s relations with Africa Prof Yun Sun has explained why inferior products from China have flooded Nigeria and other parts of Africa.

    Sun, of The Brookings Institution in Washington DC, United States, said some businessmen from Nigeria demand for low quality products.

    A statement yesterday by Africa Today publisher Kayode Soyinka quoted Sun as speaking at the Africa-China Summit, organised by the newspaper in Abuja.

    She said: “I have been asked this question many times. I take these issues to them, and they say they are aware. And they say they see it as a problem, but say: ‘We sell what they are willing to pay.’ From their perspective and their answers, they say they have products of different levels of quality and all levels of prices and no one should expect the best quality of product with the lowest price. And that is not just economical and that does not follow all the rules. Their argument is best on supply, meeting the local demands given their economic capacity. They are willing and capable of supplying Africa with the kind of product they sell to Europe, which they sell to the United States. But the question is can African market afford that? I am not defending their position. I am just saying that is some economic argument.”

    The statement also quoted former United Kingdom Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills Sir Vince Cable as noting that China was now trying to build a reputation with the international community by improving the quality of its products.

    Cable said: “What is happening is that there are Chinese companies trying to become global leaders and with high quality. Still, there are certain Chinese companies that don’t have those interests at heart. Another general comment that I will make is that China has got a bad reputation in Africa for cutting corners, companies coming here to use timber that was not properly accredited, using wild animals for export and so on. I think in general, the Chinese authorities and the leading Chinese companies are now really determined to get away from that past.”

  • Buhari in China: Beyond the loan

    What Femi Adesina, President Muhammadu Buhari’s media adviser noted and dispatched to Nigeria on his visit (with his principal) to the People’s Republic of China penultimate week isn’t different from what every traveller to that land of Mao Tse-tung observed.

    Sharing his findings with compatriots in his essay, Dispatch from China: what order, discipline did to China, Adesina quotes Buhari as saying of Beijing, the Chinese capital: “Did you notice the level of discipline in this city? Did you notice the cleanliness and order? Did you see anybody throwing litter or garbage anywhere? And did you see their security agents, how smart and dutiful they were?”

    The Nigerian leader spoke in a jet when leaving Beijing for Shanghai. As he and Adesina and another aide watched the city recede, they froze in wistful amazement at how a society’s hundreds of millions of citizens could be so shaped as to see discipline as the first patriotic duty. Femi Adesina was to exclaim: “Discipline is the name of the game, and it has done China a world of good.”

    A few decades ago, a commentator, Doak Barnett, not known for any love for Communist China also wrote: “Some years ago, a foreigner who had just toured Communist China came out to Hong Kong and remarked,  with awe in his voice: ‘I never thought that human beings and society could be reconstructed so easily’. If he meant that the changes of recent years had been relatively painless, he was very wrong. The plastic surgery that the communists had been performing on Chinese society for over a decade had been painful indeed for millions of Chinese… But if, in using the word ‘easily’, the visitor actually meant ‘rapidly’, it is easy to share some of his awe. The Chinese communists have dramatically demonstrated that an effective … regime can achieve extensive social change at a breakneck pace.

    What did the trick?

    Following the 1949 Revolution in China, the great Mao Tse-tung who led the movement shut the borders of the country to the outside world. He and his loyal communist leaders adopted a tough stance that ensured that the people and their rulers fed only on what was available inwards, locally. The cars they rode, however archaic, were what the “elite” Politburo (Communist Party Leadership) and the other working classes alike used.

    No palatial palate was cultivated to hunger for a billionaire’s breakfast. Since it was a peasant and workers socialist putsch in the first place, China under Mao couldn’t be allowed to tolerate the contradiction of a heavily moneyed class to exist side by side with the poor as we have in Nigeria. In this huge enclosure untainted by the unbridled spending and consumerist culture of the capitalist Western world, Mao began to remould China and its people.

    In 1958, the country embarked on the Great Leap Forward Programme (Walking on Two Feet). Agriculture and industry saw China match the old Soviet Union and the formidable Western powers of US and UK in industrial, scientific and technological production. The Cultural Revolution that followed disavowed the intrusion of destructive moral values that could either retard or bring down altogether the progress in the political, social and economic spheres of the new China. Actually, the cultural war was what deepened the discipline Mao sought for his people. It aided in reshaping and adjusting the mighty masses of the population. It poised them for the gigantic solemn task of forming a new society and freeing the people from dependence on foreign tastes. The Chinese nation has been described as a Spartan nation of “infinite patience and adaptability”. This enabled them to endure the painful pill Mao gave them. It has also helped them to survive tumultuous upheavals, all of which have finally pushed China to become the world’s number two economic power house, after the USA. Today, experts say in a few decades China will leap into the number one position.

    In view of all these, I am not at all moved by the loan coming our way in Nigeria as a result of our President’s trip to China nor am I excited that at last the Chinese will soon be here to upgrade our derelict and Neanderthal infrastructure. I am interested rather in what Buhari’s encounter with the Chinese has taught: unruliness in our politics, in how we handled our wealth when we had it a plenty, in our leadership template as the cause of all our woes today. And it would continue this way, and take worst turns if we don’t first battle this character drawback the way the Chinese did it.

    Let the Americans also bring in their dollars and the Britons their Pound Sterling and Europe its Euros in loans of any tenor. This will not solve our problems if we do not do the first things first. The Yoruba say if you fail to inculcate the virtues of integrity and self-restraint in your offspring and all you think of is to throw wealth at them in the form of building property for them and educating them without moral spinal cord, these ill-tutored children would end up becoming barbarians, destroying your legacy and prized name.

    We have built a nation of wealth-worshipping citizens and leaders who view the world through a prosperity telescope. We do not honour labour. Preferment, whether social, economic or political is brewed in the cauldron of corruption. Our youth and women who ought to be our treasured capital and engine of development are wasting because we don’t capture them in our vision. They have permitted themselves to be caged in the pigeonhole of idleness, refusing to breakout but turning to criminality. Who cares? Everybody is a felon. Everybody plays a smart one. We are all Smart Alec.

    It is the system thrown up by our lifestyle of indiscipline that is responsible for this mass social decay. The system has allowed too much foul money among the political class and their cronies. There is a surfeit of this wealth also in the civil service bureaucracy and its contractor entrepreneurs. When everyone aspires to join them, including students waiting to finish school, you have a perfect setting for the emergence of the patriarch and matriarch of indiscipline. Now, the ensuing cloying affluence of the few has as given Nigeria a pejorative world title: We are the biggest exporter of illicit money on the planet. Refer to the disclosure of the Panama Papers. And yet there is poverty in the land. This reminds us of the lament of the Ancient Mariner: water water everywhere but none to drink!

     

    • Ojewale is a journalist and writer in Ota, Ogun State.
  • 16 killed in north-eastern India landslide

    16 killed in north-eastern India landslide

    Indian police said 16 people were killed in a landslide in a remote village near India’s north-eastern border with China.

     

    An official at the police control room of Tawang said that heavy rains in Arunachal Pradesh state’s Tawang district triggered the landslide early Friday.

     

    He said boulders and mud came sliding down a hillside and buried a temporary settlement of labourers who were working at the construction site of a hotel at Famla village on the outskirts of Tawang town.

     

    The police said 16 bodies had been found and more people were feared buried in the rubble, while rescue operations were ongoing.

     

    Meanwhile, landslides brought on by heavy pre-monsoon rains had also been reported from other parts of the region.

     

    Electricity had been cut off and roads blocked in some areas and houses damaged.

  • Enugu, China in N11b housing pact

    Enugu, China in N11b housing pact

    In its effort to provide housing for all, the Enugu State government has teamed up with a firm FIT Consult Ltd for the development of New Independence Layout in the Enugu metropolis.

    The project, expected to gulp N11 billion, is to be undertaken by the Shenyang Yuanda Commercial Company Ltd, a Chinese firm. The new estate would also take the pattern of Chinese housing estates known as the Heliu Residences.

    Facilities to be enjoyed in the estate include 24 hour water supply, 24 hour security, serviced plots, paved roads, street lights, recreation club, shopping mall, sidewalks and parks.

    The state Commissioner for Lands and Urban Development, Hon. Solomon Onah told reporters at the presentation of the housing project that such estate has not been developed anywhere in the Southeast.

    Onah noted that since the creation of Enugu state 25 years ago, no new area has been developed in a proper manner, with full modern facilities until now.

    He explained that the Heliu Residences at the New Independence Layout is to be constructed in partnership with a consortium of local and international companies led by FIT Consult Limited.

    He threw some light on the project, saying, “This is a Public-Private partnership, where the state government is contributing the land required, while the consortium will develop the infrastructure, so that the serviced plots can be made available for individual development. The estimated total cost of infrastructure is about N3.5billion and we hope that the much needed revenue the state seeks will come from the sales of the plots while providing job opportunities for our teeming youths.”

    Presenting the specifics of the project, the managing partner of the FIT Consult Limited, Chief Loretta Aniagolu explained that FIT Consult and its consortium would provide financing to construct the infrastructure and houses.

    She said that total estimated infrastructure cost is N3.5billion while estimated housing construction cost is N7.5billion. She further explained that only single family or twin family duplexes and bungalows are permitted and not exceeding two floors of ground and first.

    According to Aniagolu, a plot of land at the estate is obtainable at between N9.5million and N10billion and allocation is within 10 working days of down payment while the certificate of occupancy is obtained within 14 working days of payment of statutory fees.

    “All home construction must commence by March 2017 and money back guarantee of infrastructure not provided by March 2017,” stressed Aniagolu.

    The Chinese managing partner, Xin Jiang Johnny in his contribution said the estate is in two sections. One will be fully developed by the consortium while the other to be built by individuals but strictly to the specifications.”

  • China sentences computer technician to death for espionage

    China has sentenced a computer technician to death for selling classified documents to foreign agencies, a media report said on Wednesday.

    The report said that Huang Yu, 41, sold 150,000 documents including military codes from 2002 to 2011 for a total of around 700,000 dollars.

    “Huang was working at a research lab specialising in cryptology in the south-western city of Chengdu and had sold the information because he wanted to get rich,’’ the report said, without stating the foreign agencies involved.

    Media also aired an interview with Huang where he admitted to meeting with foreign spies in South-East Asia and stealing documents from his wife and brother-in-law, who also worked with classified information.

    The reports said Huang’s wife was sentenced to five years in prison and his brother-in-law was sentenced to three years in prison, both for negligent disclosure of state secrets.

    According to the reports, many facts about the case are unclear.

    Huang was arrested in 2011, although the date of sentencing was not reported.

    “It is not clear why authorities did not publicise his case until now, and it has not been confirmed whether his execution has in fact been carried out.

    “If there are other people doing similar things, betraying their country, I hope they will report themselves to the national security people,’’ Huang said in the video, while wearing shackles around his wrist.

    Televised confessions from high profile suspects including business executives, journalists and activists have become increasingly common in the past few years.

    The news came after China on Friday marked its second annual National Security Education Day, with posters and slogans warning against the dissemination of confidential information.

    The public awareness campaign included a pamphlet telling the cautionary tale of a young Chinese woman working in a propaganda department, who is seduced into revealing state secrets by a charming foreign spy posing as an academic.

     

  • Knocks for Fayose over China ‘letter’

    Knocks for Fayose over China ‘letter’

    •Odigie-Oyegun, lawyers, others slam governor

    There were more knocks yesterday for Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose  over his “protest” letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    President Muhammadu Buhari last week visited the People’s Republic of China.

    He negotiated a loan and a currency swap deal with the Chinese as part of efforts to revive the economy.

    On April 12, Fayose travelled to China to urge the authorities to refuse the facility being requested by the Federal Government.

    He said “all Nigerians, irrespective of their political and religious affiliations are against any applications for new foreign loans”.

    This, the governor said, was on the grounds that servicing the current debt burden costs over 25 per cent of the country’s annual budget.

    All Progressives Congress National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun berated Fayose for his criticism.

    He noted that the President won the election based on his personal credentials, coupled with international recognition and respect.

    Odigie-Oyegun, who spoke in Benin City, the Edo State capital, said the country was being confronted by retrogressive forces and economic saboteurs.

    His words: “I hope Fayose did not really do what we were told he did. I don’t think he is capable of descending into this low depth but if he did I feel sorry for him.

    “Nigerians should ask him what he was doing in China. Anyway, we are not bothered, the President is not bothered.

    ‘’Most people do not recognise the  economy’s sorry state and the fact that it was run aground.

    “This contributed in no small measure towards the crash of crude oil from N120 per barrel to a miserable N30 to N40 per barrel in the international market.

    “Is there anyone who cannot recognise the fact that Nigeria has almost become a paralysed state?

    “We do not have respect all over the world and the reality is that every sector was grounded but APC won the election based on Buhari’s personal credibility.”

    Odigie-Oyegun  went on: “In a situation where the world has become a global village, the President has taken his prestige and time around the world to polish our image.

    “The countries he has visited are critical to peace in Nigeria or to our economic speedy revival.

    “The truth is that Mr. President is getting the world to respect and know the new Nigeria and to be ready to help to revive the economy.

    ‘’ Everything he has done, including the foreign tours, is to gather all the support that is necessary to make a dramatic impact on the condition of Nigeria as quickly as possible.’’

    Chairmen of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos State and other lawyers also condemned the governor’s action.

    A former Chairman of Ikeja Branch,Onyekachi Ubani, described the letter as of no consequence, since negotiations had  been concluded.

    “The letter is similar to a situation of bringing a motion for a court injunction for a completed act.

    “This letter is a mere irritation, especially coming from a governor.

    “ I will urge Nigerians to regard his letter as nothing, but a mere irritation.

    The Ikeja Branch Chairman , Yinka Farobi, described the letter as “over stepping of one’s boundaries”.

    “Fayose was elected  governor and not as president.

    “His letter is clearly out of the purview of his powers and I seriously condemn it,” he said.

    The Ikorodu Branch Chairman, Dotun Adetunji, described the letter as a show of rascality.

    He noted that although “there is a provision for immunity for a sitting governor, there must also be a limit on the activities of a leader”.

    “There are 36 states and of these, only one governor has the courage to write to a foreign authority.

    “In my mind, such action is really reprehensible and should be discouraged.”

    A lawyer, Spurgeon Ataene, said: “If the loan being sought by the Federal Government is to revamp the  economy, then we should not have a problem with that.

    “The only thing we should demand from the government is that the loan should be used for the purpose for which it was obtained in the first place.

    “To that extent, all Nigerians must be watchdogs and at all times demand that the benefit of the loan must trickle down to the masses.”

    Another lawyer, Ola Ogunbiyi, said Fayose’s action fell short of the status of his exalted office.

    “Fayose is a `security risk’ working against national interest. I think he has too much freedom and should be cautioned.”

    A former APC senatorial candidate for Edo Central District, Dr. Francis Inegbeniki, said the governor’s latest stunt has given him out as someone in need of medical attention.

    Inegbeniki said it was very important for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  leadership to call Fayose to order as his actions and statements are embarrassing the country.

    “In Nigeria, we have one President, therefore it is an insult for a non-performing and lazy governor like Fayose to have written such a letter.  Only a rebel does that to his country,” he said.