Saturday, June 20, 2020

objectives of the Chinese Communist Party

6-20-20   Brazil 55.2/417= 13% increase/day  new cases/active cases https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/brazil
Mexico 566/1695= 33% increase/day  https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/mexico
Chile  63/295= 21% increase/day https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/chile
India   14.7/154= 9.5% increase/day   https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/india/

South Africa 38/342= 11% increase/day
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  "That's where ASIO lives," Clive Hamilton says, using the common shorthand for Australia's intelligence agency, the Australian Security Intelligence Organization.  He then points out Australia's federal police building and to a compound in the middle, where China built its embassy.
  "They picked that spot, and they have a lot of clout, they have a vast compound, and they kind of get what they want around here," he says….Hamilton says China's Communist Party has infiltrated Chinese-Australian associations devoted to students and scholars, writers and religious activities.  "From taking over Chinese associations, buying political influence, promoting Beijing-loyal people into elected political positions, buying influence in universities by sponsoring think tanks, cyber-intrusion operations, you name it, they're doing it," he says.  But Australia is beginning to fight back. …
  "China's different in scale and it's different also in that it can integrate the private sector, education, civil society--all arms, if you like--of the state and the community with the objectives of the Chinese Communist Party," says
Rory Medcalf, head of the National Security College at Australian National University.   "We're not really dealing with a normal country here.  We're dealing with an authoritarian party state, where in fact Chinese citizens owe a higher loyalty to the party than to the state itself. So what we're dealing with here is the largest secret organization in human history.”…
  "Jian Yang is not just connected to China's Communist Party," says
Chen Weijian.  Chen Weijian fled Hangzhou, China, for New Zealand in 1991, escaping imprisonment in China for working on a pro-democracy newspaper.  "He was sent here by them to spy on New Zealand.  But people in Yang's party — the National Party — all think he's good for New Zealand-China relations.  A lot of his party's donations come through him, and he often leads government trips to China to make lucrative deals there."  https://www.npr.org/2018/10/02/627249909/australia-and-new-zealand-are-ground-zero-for-chinese-influence

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