Thursday, October 17, 2024
Home Blog Page 64

Van Aert, retrouver la lumière après un printemps amer

0

Pour la première fois de sa carrière, Wout van Aert (Visma | Lease a Bike) va participer à la Vuelta, dont le Grand Départ sera donné ce samedi. La saison du coureur belge a jusquu0027à présent été pauvre en succès, la faute principalement à une sévère chute survenue au printemps…
Read More

In troubled Taiwan China waters, a swimming race provides rare hope

0

Kinmen, Taiwan – On Taiwan’s sandy shores, Liu Xi Jiu puts on his goggles as he prepares to race across one of the most dangerous stretches of water in the world.

Originally from Beijing, he is competing in the only event of its kind, a seven-kilometre (4.3-mile) swimming race across a geopolitical hotspot, from Taiwan’s offshore Kinmen Islands to the city of Xiamen on China’s east coast.

Around him, 200 athletes from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau laugh and joke as they warm up. In front of them, past the rows of anti-invasion spikes that line Kinmen’s golden beaches, Xiamen’s distinctive skyscrapers glint in the morning sun.

But the warm weather and sense of friendly competition mask the increasingly tense relations across the strait that separates democratic Taiwan from China, which claims the island as its own.

The swimmers, preparing to make the gruelling 90-minute crossing, hope their camaraderie can serve as an example for smoother exchanges across these choppy waters.

Kinmen and its residents have always had a close relationship with China, Wu Zeng Yun, CEO of the Kinmen-Matsu Joint Services Centre, told Al Jazeera.

While Wu’s workplace now serves as the local branch of Taiwan’s central executive, the building still bears the name Fujian Provincial Government. Emblazoned in gold above the imposing entrance, the characters are a reminder of the time when Kinmen was part of China’s Fujian Province.

“In the past, my uncles did business in Tong’an on the mainland,” Wu said, referring to the historic district visible across the waters from just outside his office.

Three men on a beach in Kinmen. They are standing on the sand pointing at Xiamen which can be seen in the distance. There are anti-invasion spikes on the beach
The city of Xiamen is clearly visible from the beaches of KInmen [Jan Camenzind Broomby/Al Jazeera]

“It was a shared living area,” he added. “You simply went to the pier, boarded a ship to Tong’an, and paid the fare.”

But after the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, everything changed. Facing defeat at the hands of the Communists, the nationalist Republic of China government fled Beijing and established itself in Taiwan. It also retained control of the Kinmen Islands, more than 300km (186 miles) from Taipei.

The island’s residents were cut off from the province they had once been part of and soon found themselves on the front lines of a political battle between Taipei and Beijing that at times erupted into violence.

With China regularly shelling the island until 1979, residents can remember hiding in the bunkers that dot the island, taking cover as bombs rained down on their villages.

China reaffirmed its willingness to use force to take control of Taiwan, which considers the territory its own, in a white paper as recently as 2022. The government in Taipei says the people of Taiwan should be the ones to decide their future.

Heightened tensions

Standing in Kinmen’s Shuitou Pier Ferry Terminal, Legislator Chen Yu Jen said her father was on board one of the first boats that reconnected Kinmen with China in 2001.

At the time, it was hoped such connections could help improve relations between Taipei and Beijing, but as Chen makes her way to the departure gate, preparing to follow in her father’s footsteps, that hope has yet to materialise.

In mid-February, Kinmen was once again the focus of cross-strait tensions after a clash between the Taiwanese coastguard and a Chinese ship caught fishing in Kinmen’s waters. Two of the fishermen died.

To make matters worse, it was discovered that the Chinese boat had capsized after it collided with the Taiwanese ship, a fact that Taipei had initially omitted from its account of the incident.

In response, the Chinese Coast Guard (CCG), indirectly under the command of Beijing’s Central Military Commission, stepped up its presence in the region.

u Wen Shiung on his boat. He is standing at the wheel. He is wearing a white shirt, baseball cap and sunglasses
Fisherman Lu Wen Shiung says Chinese Coast Guard ships have chased him in waters near Kinmen [Jan Caemnzind Broomby/Al Jazeera]

Looking out across the troubled waters from his small boat, local fisherman and business owner Lu Wen Shiung says the fishing community has already felt the impact.

“When cross-strait relations were less tense, we had good relations with the coastal fishermen from the mainland,” he recalled. “If the mainland fishermen had a good catch, they would share with us.”

But with CCG ships beginning to regularly cross into Kinmen’s territorial waters, a line that was largely respected until February, Lu now faces pressure from Chinese ships even when his boat is motoring closer to Kinmen’s shores.

“The activities of the Chinese Coast Guard have changed significantly. They now frequently patrol our waters,” explained Lu.

In an unprecedented move, the CCG even boarded a Taiwanese tour boat in February. Three months later, it announced a series of military exercises around Kinmen for the first time.

“Whenever we go out to sea, we often encounter them,” fisherman Lu said, referencing the CCG. “This year, I’ve already been chased three times.”

In early July, a Taiwanese fishing boat with two Taiwanese and three Indonesian nationals on board was also seized by the Chinese Coast Guard and taken to the mainland, accused of violating a summer fishing ban. The boat’s captain remains under investigation, but the crew was released this week.

“Some fishermen who work nearby are worried that any misstep could result in their boat being detained,” Kinmen county councillor, Tung Sen Pao, told Al Jazeera.

While analysts say China’s incursions are part of Beijing’s “grey zone” tactics to exert pressure on Taipei, some in Kinmen worry about the potential risk of escalation and accidental conflict.

An old tank submerged in sand on a Kinmen beach. There is a person walking in the distance.
An old tank is a reminder of past outbreaks of conflict on Kinmen [Jan Camenzind Broomby/Al Jazeera]

Recognition and respect for Kinmen’s restricted waters is “crucial for maintaining peace”, said Wu of the Kinmen-Matsu Joint Services Centre. “If the mainland unilaterally denies it, it increases the risk of conflict.”

“If border units, coast guards and coast police clash during their duties … it might lead to unnecessary disputes and accidents, potentially sparking military conflicts, which would be detrimental to both sides,” Councillor Tung said.

Silver linings

Despite the upset caused by the fishermen’s deaths, some are hopeful that Kinmen can once again become a place of cross-strait collaboration, noting a level of “goodwill” between local governments on the island and in Xiamen.

On July 30, Taipei’s Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF), a semi-official organisation tasked with promoting cross-strait cooperation, and their Chinese counterparts finally came to an agreement that would repatriate the bodies of the Chinese fishermen, whose deaths led to the initial rise in tensions in February, back to the mainland.

With the men’s bodies now returned to China, some are hoping tensions will ease.

A former Taiwanese soldier, detained in March after his boat strayed into Chinese waters, was also released this month.

Back on Kinmen’s beach, Chinese swimmer Liu stands shoulder to shoulder with his Taiwanese competitors, facing the Chinese coast.

For him and many of the other Chinese swimmers, the race marks their first time in Taiwan.

Like the organisers of the competition, the swimmers hope that the race serves as an example of what cooperation can achieve, and the diplomatic advances already made.

“This kind of sports event helps foster connections between people,” he said. “I hope the two sides can resolve issues peacefully.”

Swimmer Liu Xi Jiu. He is in his swimming shorts and seated. He looks pensive. Other swimmers are behind him
Liu Xi Jiu hopes the race will show the people of China and Taiwan can forge connections [Jan Camenzind Broomby/Al Jazeera]

At the sound of the starting horn, he dives headfirst into the waves, powering through the water on his way to Xiamen.

“In the past, the sea was a battlefield between Kinmen and Xiamen. They fought each other with bullets,” Legislator Chen recalled. When she was growing up, Kinmen’s shores were strictly off-limits, reserved for military purposes.

“Now this sea is a place of peace. People can swim over and swim back,” she said.

With additional reporting by Edison Tseng

Read More

Trump and Harris Zero Tax on Tips for Casino Workers May Be Red Herring

0

Both Trump and Harris have promised casino workers that they would pass legislation that exempts tips from taxes, effectively boosting their cash-on-hand in real terms. Yet, none of the two candidates has told workers how hard passing such legislation would be, verging on the impossible.

Trump and Harris Think Good Politics, Not Good Policy

Eliminating tax on workers’ tips would be a major challenge, not least because it would deprive the federal budget of important revenue.

Yet, such a move would invite further economic chicanery with workers and employers suddenly finding themselves in a position where they have realized that parts of their remunerations might better qualify as tips.

Despite both Harris and Trumps’ desire to court workers and voters in swing states, the practicality of their attack line from the stump has been more of a red herring rather than the real thing. Trump, though, was caught off-guard when Harris copied his proposal and went on social media to complain about his most likely opponent in the November election.

None of the two candidates has fleshed out in acceptably tangible terms how they would go about passing such a major change in legislation, and not hurt the economy. Furthermore, observers expect that while good on paper for casino workers, and other workers who rely on tips, the measure would not improve the livelihoods of many low-income workers the same way as a higher minimum wage would.

Harris’s proposal, for one, though, seems to be closely rooted in some sort of reality, as the campaign has acknowledged that exempting tips from taxation would invite unsavory practices, and has confirmed that there are already hedges planned against that. No specifics were given as to what the proposed safeguards are. Trump’s campaign has chosen not to flesh out any details in the meantime.

Not everyone agrees with the bleak outlook, however. According to Darin Miller, a spokesperson for Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, there is too much hysterics surrounding the issue, as the Internal Revenue Service has a very clear definition of what tips are, and fudging the numbers would be hard, and risk a serious federal response. This may be true, but the IRS is also spread thin.

Unions May Be Turning on Republicans

Exempting tips another insider says is not necessarily a good policy – it may be good politics though. The reason for this is that tipped workers tend to be younger, and they also have a lower income, which means that they fall into a lower tax bracket. Further exemption on their tips will not necessarily translate into better living conditions, for example.

Yet, Harris is certainly reaping some benefits. Union bosses may generally represent Republican-leaning members, but they have been less than pleased with the former president or his comments on union busting, and a recent conversation he had with Elon Musk, Tesla’s boss.

Now that Harris has vowed for the same measure, many unions seem likely to try and convince their members to vote for the Democratic ticket.

In the meantime, the United Auto Workers has filed a lawsuit against Musk and Trump, precisely because of their conversation, in which Trump praised the tech boss’ management style which supposedly boils down to union busting and firing employees who protest working conditions.

In contrast, Harris also seems to be in a good position with the tribal gaming industry, which has been content with the Biden administration.

Read More

Trump, Harris inflation arguments are questionable, Chicago Fed president says

0

Austan Goolsbee speaking at Jackson Hole on Aug. 8, 2023.

David A. Grogan | CNBC

Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee on Sunday warned against misrepresenting the inflationary impacts of corporate price hikes and tariffs, which have become focal points of the Trump and Harris campaigns’ economic platforms.

Goolsbee steered away from directly speaking on the presidential race given the Fed’s commitment to remaining independent and politically neutral. But his comments come during an election cycle in which voters have consistently ranked the economy and the high cost of living as their top priorities.

As a result, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have both made lowering costs the driving force of their economic proposals.

Harris has proposed a federal ban on “corporate price-gouging in the food and grocery industries.” The Biden administration has repeatedly blamed stubbornly high prices on companies that have kept their prices artificially high even as their production costs come down.

Though Goolsbee would not explicitly comment on the Harris campaign’s proposals, he said high prices cannot be solely explained by corporate profit motives.

“The difference between what’s happening to prices and what’s happening to costs, that can vary a lot over the business cycle,” Goolsbee said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “So I just caution everybody over-concluding from any one observation about markups.”

Goolsbee also clarified the inflationary impact of higher tariffs, one of the key pillars of Trump’s proposed economic plan.

“Tariffs raise prices,” he said. “A one-time increase in cost will raise prices but is not an extended inflationary thing.”

Trump has repeatedly promised that he would hike tariffs on all imports across the board, including by implementing a higher rate specifically for Chinese imports.

Economists have cited that hardline tariff proposal as a major reason that Trump’s proposed agenda could threaten to reheat inflation, but the Republican presidential nominee has flatly rejected that notion.

“A tariff is a tax on a foreign country. … It’s a tax on a country that’s ripping us off and stealing our jobs, and it’s a tax that doesn’t affect our country,” Trump said at his rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday.

Goolsbee said that tariffs do not necessarily result in long-term inflation, but by making producer costs more expensive, they do increase consumer prices in the short term.

“Whether you want to call that inflationary or not, they raise costs and they raise prices,” he said.

Inflation has been cooling slightly over the past several months since it reached sky-high levels in the summer of 2022. Last Wednesday, the annual inflation rate in the consumer price index report reached its lowest level since March 2021.

But as Trump and Harris work to sell their economic pitches to inflation-weary voters, investors’ eyes are on the Fed. Many are hoping the central bank cuts interest rates in September, especially as recessionary fears heighten.

The Fed is preparing for its annual meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, this coming week, where markets will be looking for signals of an interest rate cut.

Goolsbee, who is not currently a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee, stressed that the Fed is still mulling its interest rate decision.

“Everything is always on the table — there’s possibility of recession,” he said. “The last GDP growth number was higher than expected, so that was a that was one of the bright spots, but you’ve always got to worry about every contingency. That’s the job of the central banker.”

Read More

Hochstein calls for diplomatic action to end Gaza violence

0

Amos Hochstein a senior adviser to President Joe Biden stated on Wednesday that it is essential to capitalize on the chance for diplomatic intervention to resolve the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza and the persistent violence in Lebanon…
Read More

Katy Perry Production Company Under Investigation Following Ibiza Beach Video Shoot

0

Katy Perry’s production company is under investigation in Spain for filming a music video in a protected area without clearance. The production company behind the music video for Katy Perry’s single “Lifetimes” is under investigation in Spain for filming in Ibiza, a protected region and national park…
Read More

Solanke shatters transfer record but Liverpool and Manchester United must break more for top targets

0

If Liverpool want Anthony Gordon and Manchester United are after Jarrad Branthwaite, they must do what Spurs just have for Bournemouth with Dominic Solanke.   Arsenal Paul Merson – £5m (to Middlesbrough in July 1997) Nicolas Anelka – £22.3m (to Real Madrid in August 1999) Marc Overmars – £25m (to Barcelona in July 2000) Cesc …
Read More

Scientists Capture Thought in Stunning New Detail

0

Recordings from thousands of neurons reveal how a person’s brain abstractly represents acts of reasoning. Researchers have identified how the brain forms cognitive maps during inferential reasoning by analyzing neurons in epilepsy patients. The hippocampus, traditionally linked to physical space mapping, also structures cognitive processes. This study highlights how experiential and verbal learning impact neural …
Read More

Tout a changé, tout reste pareil

0

Manchester United su0027avance comme lu0027une des grandes curiosités de la saison en Prmeier League au moment du0027ouvrir son championn at vendredi face à Fulham (21h). Lu0027arrivée de Sir Jim Ratcliff à la tête du club annonçait une révolution au sein des Red Devils. Le changement peut sembler relatif à première vue…
Read More

Bicycles, kick scooters to be banned from pedestrian-only footpaths, Singapore News

0

SINGAPORE – Footpaths situated next to more than 200km of cycling lanes will be turned into pedestrian-only paths progressively from the last quarter of 2024 in an effort to improve the safety of pedestrians, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) said. With this move, bicycles and non-motorised personal mobility devices (PMDs) such as kick-scooters, which are
Read More