Taiwan, corruption, and ‘Surf-n-Turf’ for dinner

I’ve tried to stay out of the fray on the current political dispute in Taiwan. First, I’ve never been there. Second, there are bloggers out there far more in touch with the state of affairs in Taipei than I am.

But yesterday on CDT, I read a Financial Times piece on Taiwan president Chen Shui-bian’s plans to “freeze” the current ROC constitution and adopt a new one.

Mr Chen’s comments indicate he could adopt a more audacious course in strengthening Taiwan’s separation from China before he steps down, an approach which would unsettle cross-Strait relations after more than two years of relative quiet.

Mr Chen triggered warnings from China and the US in late 2003 and again in early 2004 when he first proposed a new constitution and pushed for Taiwan’s first island-wide referendum.

His remarks appear designed to regain support among Taiwanese nationalist voters, a group his ruling party badly needs to win over before a series of forthcoming elections.

As the article notes, the original constitution was written in the wake of World War II while the KMT was still on the mainland. For example, the current version is not

"When East Meets South": China’s African Gambit

Nearly six centuries after Zheng He first reached the Horn of Africa, China once again turns its attentions to the African continent. Leaders of 48 of the 53 African countries, including 40 heads of state, plan to arrive this weekend for perhaps the biggest diplomatic event China has ever organized.

The official purpose of the three-day China-Africa Forum is to expand trade, allow China to secure the oil and ore it needs for its booming economy, and help African nations improve roads, railroads and schools.

The unofficial purpose is to redraw the world’s strategic map, forming tighter political ties between China, now the fastest-growing major economy, and a continent whose leaders often complain of being neglected by the United States and Europe.

This is of course not the first time in recent memory China has courted African leaders. During the Cold War, China would frequently reach out to Socialist states (shaky though they were) and the bidding wars between the PRC and the ROC for UN votes too often focused on cash-poor African nations.

This time though, the Chinese want trade and commerce. They want raw materials. And they’re not particularly finicky about with whom they do business.

A blog you should be reading

I’ve mentioned it in this space before, but one of my all-time favorite China blogs has to be Big Trouble in Little China written by Brett: native New Yorker, pantheon-level raconteur and bon vivant, and a helluva writer to boot. Of the more recent posts, I’d have to recommend his trip report to the Qingdao beer festival. It’s put down the milk funny.

While you’re there, check out his archives and especially some of the photo albums…the man can throw down with best of them.

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