Latest: As part of the series to look at illegal wildlife trade across the world, I dived into the role of #China's overseas Special Economic Zones in facilitating illegal wildlife trade across the world. Here's what experts said: independent.co.uk/stop-the-illeg…
As China expands its economic footprints and influence across the world through SEZs, experts said that regions with high levels of Chinese investment face the risk of environmental degradation and flouting of local and international laws.
“Investors rarely care very much about the local environment,” said John Walsh, an expert on regional economic development in Southeast Asia. “They may link their activities with timber clearing, monocropping plantations or even bananas in northern Myanmar and ...
... generally moving local people out of the way.”
Mr Walsh claimed SEZs in Myanmar and Laos have become “overseas enclaves of China”, with Chinese money, Chinese language and Chinese laws being the dominant currency, language and laws within the zones.
“Local people are made to feel like second-class citizens and their employment status reflects that,” he added.
In a research paper published in 2018, Mr Walsh and two other academics found that medical use is the most dominant purpose for wildlife trade in the SEZ.
“The findings confirm the important and active role Boten plays in the illegal wildlife trade, where an inherent link with China was apparent,” the paper concluded. “Lao’s economic zones are known to cater to largely Chinese markets, including for the illegal sale of wildlife.”
Steven Galster from @FREELANDglobal said SEZs had a history of facilitating illegal wildlife trade. “These SEZs reduce custom inspection, which allows trade to be sped up,” he told the Independent.
“Within China, the government doesn’t let these stories out as much as other countries. It’s not open about the internal conflicts, investigations or discoveries about who is behind the trade.”
Galster said medicines and potions – animals parts packaged and marketed as traditional cures – made up the majority of the illegal wildlife trade in SEZs. Other less common goods trafficked include ornaments or live animals.
“Since the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak, the one trade that has been allowed to persist and it probably will be for a while, is the medicine trade,” he said. “It’s anything that you can keep for a long period and bag up, whether it’s pangolin scale or Ginseng.”
Walsh points out that not all of China’s overseas SEZs are generating negative impacts on the hosting country. According to him, large projects in well-regulated areas in Thailand, Chinese companies can compete against international firms in a transparent and coherent manner.
It is in less well-regulated areas that Chinese companies might structure deals to their advantages due to lack of competitions. According to @JohnHillman4, it is common for China to renegotiate a deal and try to defer the debt.
“Something problematic about this is that as you have countries with debt distress, some of the Chinese negotiations are happening bilaterally and behind closed doors,” he said. “There’s no transparency.”
Hillman said China might ask other countries for preferred access to natural resources or preferred access to future contracts. “They want to be first in line for those in the future,” he explained.
“They could be asking for support on diplomatic issues. All of those things are more likely as they are less likely to have a smoking gun.”
Beijing currently has 33 SEZs across the world. While some SEZs are well-regulated and transparent, Mr Walsh said there are others where low-skilled workers on low wages are exploited.
He pointed out that SEZs are generally spatial areas in which capital is valued over labour as local government agencies generally want to attract foreign money.
“However, there are also incentives for the government agencies to close their eyes to exploitation of labour or the production of negative externalities such as pollution,” Mr Walsh told the Independent.
And in order to find land for SEZs in desirable locations, local residents will often be forced to move to distant parts of the country. “In the case of Dawei SEZ in Myanmar, ...
... those inhabitants were removed to a relatively distant part of the country where agricultural conditions were unfamiliar,” Mr Walsh explained.
As countries around the world still struggle to contain the coronavirus outbreak, some experts think the pandemic serves as a warning connectivity is not always a good thing. “Flows of goods and people and other things are not purely good,” said Mr Hillman.
“There is potential for increased criminal activity in places where you’re setting up new trading hubs, sometimes in very remote places. Sometimes these are places with weak institutions and all of that is a recipe for these illicit flows to increase as well.”
One of the examples mentioned by Mr Hillman is the port of Piraeus in Greece, which is mostly owned by China’s state-owned COSCO Shipping. In 2018, authorities from the European Union and Italy launched an investigation into suspected wide-scale tax fraud ...
... by Chinese criminal gangs importing goods via the port. At the time, Italian authorities said the Chinese criminal gangs completely evaded the VAT, which caused serious damage to Italy’s national tax authorities and to the community.
Meanwhile, a report published by @EIAEnvironment in 2015 pointed out how visitors to the Golden Triangle SEZ in Laos can openly buy products made from endangered species including tigers, leopards, elephants, rhinos, pangolins, helmeted hornbills, ...
... snakes, and bears smuggled from Asia and Africa. “The unchecked illegal wildlife trade in the Golden Triangle SEZ is illustrative of illegal wildlife trade across the region, catering to growing numbers of Chinese visitors,” EIA wrote in the report.
“The government of China is acutely aware of the footprint of Chinese businesses and consumers in relation to poaching, trafficking, and the consumption of illegal wildlife.”

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More from @WilliamYang120

7 Apr
Latest for @dw_chinese (Eng version): Journalist and researcher @xu_xiuzhong became the target of a horrifying smear campaign for her works on #Xinjiang over the last few weeks. She responded with a string of tweets and she vowed to fight on. williamyang-35700.medium.com/chinese-journa…
In recent days, several articles about her emerged on Weibo, and she was characterized as a “female traitor that has betrayed the country” or a “female demon” in these articles.
Many articles even accused her of being the initiator of western businesses’ boycott of cotton from #Xinjiang. Xu began to write for the New York Times and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2017 as a freelancer.
Read 42 tweets
7 Apr
China handed death sentences to two #Uyghur ex-government officials for carrying out "separatist activities", a court said. france24.com/en/asia-pacifi…
Shirzat Bawudun, a former head of the Xinjiang department of justice has been sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve on the charge of "splitting the country."
Bawudun had conspired with a terrorist organisation, taken bribes, and carried out separatist activities, Wang Langtao, vice president of the Xinjiang Higher People's Court, said at a press conference.
Read 8 tweets
7 Apr
In a briefing with foreign media in #Taiwan, @MOFA_Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said #Taiwan will fight until the end if #China launched an attack. He said the US saw a danger that this could happen amid mounting Chinese military pressure

reuters.com/article/us-tai…
“From my limited understanding of American decision makers watching developments in this region, they clearly see the danger of the possibility of China launching an attack against Taiwan,” Joseph Wu told reporters at his ministry.
“We are willing to defend ourselves without any questions and we will fight the war if we need to fight the war. And if we need to defend ourselves to the very last day we will defend ourselves to the very last day.”
Read 8 tweets
7 Apr
Turkey summoned the #China Ambassador after the Chinese embassy warned that they could take action against two Turkish politicians who expressed support for the #Uyghurs. thehindu.com/news/internati…
Earlier on Tuesday, the Chinese Embassy tagged @meral_aksener, the head of the opposition Good Party, and Ankara's mayor, @mansuryavas_en, in two Twitter posts in which it defended Beijing's policies and said “the Chinese side reserves its right to a rightful response.”
The embassy tagged Ms. Aksener and Mr. Yavas after the two marked with Twitter posts the killing of Uyghurs by Chinese forces during an uprising in 1990.
Read 5 tweets
6 Apr
Scoop from @BethanyAllenEbr and @shawnarchen: the @iocmedia gave a uniform contract for the 2021 Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 #Beijing Olympics to a textile company in #China that has a factory in #Xinjiang. axios.com/olympic-commit…
The company also openly advertises its use of #Xinjiang cotton. The company told the IOC that the cotton used in the Olympic uniforms doesn't originate in Xinjiang.
HYX Group has a long-standing relationship with the Chinese Olympic Committee and was a sponsor of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. In listings on Taobao and JD.com, the company advertises numerous products as containing Xinjiang cotton.
Read 8 tweets
6 Apr
The U.S. said on Tuesday that it is looking to discuss with allies how to proceed with participation in the 2022 #Beijing Olympics as calls for boycotting the game continue to grow globally over #China's human rights records. reuters.com/article/us-oly…
State Department Spokesperson @StateDeptSpox repeated Washington’s concerns over Beijing’s human rights violations, particularly its persecution of #Uyghur Muslims in the #Xinjiang region, which the United States deems a genocide.
Asked if the United States was discussing with allies whether or not to consider a potential joint boycott, Price said, “It is something that we certainly wish to discuss ...
Read 6 tweets

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