1/9 There's a widening gulf between business concerns & traditional state concerns on China in tech. It emerged today that Huawei & Alibaba are sponsoring Europe's Gaia-X cloud computing event. But a far smaller story from France this morning better illustrates this phenomenon🇫🇷
2/9 @Intel_Online reported that Chinese semiconductor group FATRI (西人马) is now making solid headway in France thanks to connections in Airbus and the French Parliament. intelligenceonline.com/corporate-inte…
3/9 The growing gulf between state and business concerns is captured by events that took place in September this year. First, in France Paul Cheron & @jeangene_vilmer published a substantial & well-received report on Chinese party-state influence. rfi.fr/en/internation…
4/9 The same month, the aforementioned Chinese tech group FATRI hired Norbert Ducrot, a senior executive and previously Beijing-based President & CEO Airbus Helicopters China for 15 years. In 2017, Ducrot also set up a consulting company...
5/9 in Hong Kong "to help large and medium-sized global companies in their industrial and commercial development in Asia and more specifically in China". Ducrot is a well-respected and well-connected man, and now lends his talents to FATRI.
6/9 But who is Ducrot now working for specifically? Reports show that he is reporting to 聂泳忠 (Bill Nie). Nie visited France in 2019 having decided to set up a base for FATRI in Île-de-France.
7/9 Here, Bill Nie (centre) meets with Jean-Michel Mis (right), during that 2019 visit. Mis is a French politician with En Marche, serving as a member of the National Assembly since 2017 and Vice-President of the Cybersecurity and Digital Sovereignty Study Group.
8/9 And here is Bill Nie in China. Naturally, for someone in a role of such importance, Nie is enmeshed in the party-state. In this case as a member of the Quanzhou CPPCC.
This channel, from Chinese party-state to western policymaker via business linkages, is a common pathway.
9/9 The big stories like Huawei & Alibaba at Gaia are obviously important, but connections such as the one illustrated above are extremely common and to some extent form the architecture around wider interaction. Moving forward, understanding such linkages will be crucial.
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1/21 After days of speculation about #PrinceAndrew, Pitch@Palace, and links to China, Chris Yang's (Yang Tengbo/ 杨腾波) identity is now public knowledge. As ever, there is more to the story than meets the eye...
2/21 Having lived a long time in China, I returned in the mid-2010s to pursue a PhD in shadow international relations between the UK and China. After performing preliminary research to select case studies, I briefly considered including Yang and his UK business...
3/21 It's not just Prince Andrew who will sit uncomfortably today, there will be plenty from the higher echelons of British business who might be looking over their shoulders. But first, what of Yang's links to the Chinese party-state?
1/6 I've been testing a few things on ChatGPT to see how it might assist research. There appear to be some fascinating confabulations. I asked it to provide three of the most prominent academic articles on the Chinese party-state 2016-2019. Look carefully at the results...🧐
2/6 As far as I can tell, none of these articles by Jude Blanchette, @mcgregorrichard, or @RobertLawrKuhn actually exist (I'm happy to be corrected). Yet they do seem plausible. The final example is a book last published in 2011 rather than an article.
I tried again...
3/6 This time I urged it to correct the gender balance. Seems it is as good at making up articles for women as it is for men (though it does make a mistake with gender): Lily L. Tsai, Yanjie Bian, Christina L. Davis.
1/n Who owns London? In my latest article, I explore the relationship between authoritarianism & capitalism by investigating Chinese + Hong Kong-linked high-value property transactions in London 2010-20. Let’s take a look… link.springer.com/article/10.105…
2/n Of the various findings, the most intriguing is a pattern that appears in many of the 35 transactions. On the Chinese buyer side, we often find links to the party-state (sometimes to overseas influence organs directly).
3/n On the UK/international vendor side, we find links to UK government (through political donations and revolving door positions, for example), often weighted in favour of the private entities. In the paper I look at three examples in detail…
1/20 The news about "Chinese agent" Christine Lee broke today. I've been following her case for some time & in fact she featured in my PhD thesis on UK-China hidden relations. She's appeared in stories by @thetimes & @GuidoFawkes before. Yet there's still a lot more to this case.
2/20 Frankly, if you have experience of the Chinese party-state, it would be hard to miss her enmeshment with it. The contrast between her presence in the UK and China is eye-opening, however, and raises some questions for a few well-placed British citizens and institutions.
3/20 Christine Lee and Co. Solicitors has worked closely with the Chinese embassy. Lee first donated to Barry Gardiner directly in 2015 but had been making donations to the Labour Party in his constituency (Brent North) since 2009. Not all donations, however, were to Labour...
Today I have submitted my PhD thesis: "Fool’s Gold?: Sino-British Elites and the ‘Golden Era’ of Relations"😅. The study brings an investigative research approach to three case studies and the interconnections between them. Each case study produced genuinely revelatory findings.
The Freedom of Information requests, targeted dual language background checks, & inter-case connections appear to demonstrate coordinated party-state activity in the UK, including targeting of high profile political figures, influence over APPGs, & commercial entity compromise.
The study demonstrates linkages between actors connected to PRC involvement in UK civil nuclear energy, renminbi internationalisation in the City of London, and PRC linked acquisition of high value properties in London.