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  1. https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Belt-and-Road/East-Timor-s-new-president-still-driving-China-s-Belt-and-Road
    “ Jose Ramos-Horta, who was sworn in as president on Friday, supports China’s Belt and Road Initiative global infrastructure push, potentially increasing Beijing’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region.”

    Yeah nah, I seem to know more about this guy than an academic.
    Google up some of Hortas earlier China statements.
    Small wonder the Aussies wanted resource security (as referenced in the other TDB post on Timor).

  2. China’s reshaping the Pacific Islands’ image. Sunshine, beaches, coconut palms and concentration camps

  3. Chinese like to be treated with respect. As do most Pacific Island peoples. But the western media don’t do respect particularly well. They are fawning towards some, hectoring and disrespectful to others. Their journalists like to grandstand, and they are not even particularly concerned about being truthful.
    I am happy to talk to almost anyone about anything bit I can’t think of many New Zealand journalists that I would want to talk with, and if I had to face the full baying pack I would probably turn on my heel and walk out.
    Let the media sort itself out, and then we can worry about the Chinese.

  4. The New Zealand Media Council is anything but transparent about its own processes, and refuses to answer questions from members of the public. So is this attack on “Chinese gatekeepers” just another case of the pot calling the kettle black? Media folk seem to act on the assumption that allowing “media freedom” (actually “media privilege”) is tantamount to providing the public at large with full information on the events and issues of the day. Manifestly that is not the case. “Telling the truth without fear or favour” is an item not found on the agenda of the New Zealand news media.

  5. The New Zealand Media Council is anything but transparent about its own processes, and refuses to answer questions from members of the public. So is this attack on “Chinese gatekeepers” just another case of the pot calling the kettle black? Media folk seem to act on the assumption that allowing “media freedom” (actually “media privilege”) is tantamount to providing the public at large with full information on the events and issues of the day. Manifestly that is not the case. “Telling the truth without fear or favour” is an item not found on the agenda of the New Zealand news media.

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