Wednesday, May 10, 2017

10 May 2017.


We can watch the following videos of Nanjing, Shanghai, and Beijing as a competition of cities. What is promoted about these cities? What is the role of history and modernity in each video? Finally, do you think there are more similarities or differences between the portrayals of Chinese cities seen here? 














What is promoted about these cities?

What is promoted mostly in all these 3 Videos shown above are the modernity of each city, their glowing and towering infrastructure, their road and rail transport etc.

In the case of the Nanjing video, it is a very short one, consisting of flashes of bits and pieces of Nanjing that this video producer tried to show to the audience. I don’t think it’s that well done, as they are more sublimal in nature, and you cannot really tell what the producer is trying to convey. It is not a sales promotion, tourist-type video, since the screenshots are all fast blips, and some culture is shown, especially that of the Sun Yat-sen Monument, as Nanjing is the birthplace of Dr Sun, the founder of the modern Chinese Republic in 1911. Also shown, is the new Olympic Stadium for the 2014 Youth Olympics which was held in Nanjing from 16th August to 28th August 2014.

The same type of “scenery” can be said of the equally short Shanghai video – fast and blip, sublimal shots of Shanghai’s huge skyscrapers, super highways, lights and traffic movements, Whampoa river – the city to be in, at least in terms of doing business in China. Again, to me, it is not a promotional-type of video, since with such blip and fast-moving, scatter-shots quality photos, it is difficult to convey to the audience – especially if one is an investor, or potential investor – who may be thinking of using Shanghai as his/her business base, since there are no speaking scenes, like also the Nanjing video. It is a fast-paced, glorious example of what Shanghai is liked today, and how the Communists have turned this farmland into “socialism with Chinese characteristics” and how it epitomizes what “socialist capitalism” in China is all about, and how it can be achieved, along with its Marxist principles.

Frankly, I am rather surprised that the Shanghai Municipal Tourism Administration, which, I believe, is the tourism body promoting Shanghai, has not done a slicker video about the vast business and cultural potentials of this megacity of 22 million people, the biggest in China.

In the case of the 12-minute long Beijing video, this, to me, is more like a promotional video about business and tourism in Beijing. It goes over and over again, some of Beijing’s most famous, and world-famous cultural sites like the Palace Museum, the Great Wall, Temple of Heaven, Tiananmen Square, Ming Tombs, National Grand Theatre, Hutong Tour, Beijing Art District 798, Tsinghua University, Summer Palace, modern shopping malls, Peking University, Beijing International Airport, and so on. Plus mouth-watering and must-have Peking Roast Duck, Butterfly Tea House, Beijing Nights, Peking Opera, and the likes. It is an interesting, long video, and shows all the four seasons – spring, summer, autumn, winter – and how Beijing evolves over these periods. The stunning scenery all round is accomplished by contemporary, symphonic music, very pleasing to the ears.

A common theme which runs through all these3 Videos is the ultra-modern cities that recent engineering China has achieved, its sophistication coupled with inherent beauty and touches of history for each city.

What is the role of history and modernity in each video?

Nanjing:

Nanjing is a rarity in China: the ten-times Chinese capital is one of the very few cities where history, urbanization, and nature can be captured in one photograph. Yet it remains relatively unexplored by international travellers. Nanjing is the commercial, political, and cultural center in east China, and the capital of Jiangsu Province. The 6,600 square-kilometer city is a 3-hour drive, or 90-minute bullet train ride from Shanghai in the northwest. This city of 8 million people is also a stop on the five-hour high-speed rail (HSR) route between Beijing and Shanghai.

Due to its strategic location along the Yangtze River – China’s longest river and several of its branches also flow through Nanjing – and, at the halfway mark on China’s coastline, Nanjing served as the capital of ten Chinese dynasties for 1,800 years. In 1356, in a peasant rebellion, Zhu Yuanzhang, later to become the Emperor Taizu of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), conquered the city and renamed it Yingtian Fu. In 1368, Zhu established the Ming Dynasty – the last feudal dynasty ruled by the Han people – and gave Yingtian Fu the new name of Nanjing. Ten years later, the emperor made Nanjing the capital of the country.

Following officials’ advice of “building walls and producing grain to consolidate the rule”the emperor ordered the construction of the city walls. Today’s majestic walls in the city, the longest of its kind in the world, are the result of that phase of construction.

In 1839, the First Opium War began after Lin Zexu, the incorruptible government official, burnt twenty thousand boxes of foreign opium imports in Humen. The corrupt and weak Qing government was forced to capitulate, and signed the notorious Nanjing Treaty, the first of the many “Unequal Treaties” China was forced to sign, and, in this instance, ceded Hong Kong to Britain, which was to rule it for over a hundred years.

First Opium War
Part of the Opium Wars

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Destroying Chinese war junks, by E. Duncan (1843).jpg
The Nemesis destroying Chinese war junks during the Second Battle of Chuenpee, 7 January 1841
Date18 March 1839 – 29 August 1842[1]
(3 years, 5 months, 1 week and 4 days)
LocationChina
ResultBritish victory, Treaty of Nanking
Territorial
changes
Hong Kong Island ceded to Britain
Belligerents
 Qing dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Strength
19,000 troops200,000 troops
Casualties and losses
69 killed
451 wounded
18,000–20,000 killed or wounded
Casualties source:[2]

The Taiping Rebellion:

Peasant groups of Taiping rebelled against the Qing government in 1853, called the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864) and established the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom in this region, Nanjing’s name at that time, but in 1864, the Qing government with the aid of foreign troops, took back the city. In the Xuyuan Garden, which is within the Presidential Palace, one can still see part of the former residences of the Heavenly King Hong Xiuquan and his cohorts of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.

Taiping Rebellion
Naval battle between Taiping-Qing on Yangtze.jpg
Taiping cannonade against the Qing war-junks besieging the Heavenly Kingdom capital
DateDecember 1850 – August 1864
LocationSouthern China
Result
Belligerents
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Strength
1,100,000+[3]500,000[4]
Casualties and losses
145,000 killed243.000 killed
Total dead: At least 20 million, including civilians and soldiers (best estimate).[5]























      • Hong XiuquanHong Xiuquan.jpg
        Contemporary drawing of Hong Xiuquan, dating from around 1860
        Reign11 January 1851 – 1 June 1864Predecessor(none)SuccessorHong TianguifuIssueHong Tianguifu, Heavenly King of Great Peace
        Hong Tianming, Ming King
        Hong Tianguang, Guang King
        Full name
        Hong Xiuquan
        Era name and dates
        太平天囯: 11 January 1851 – 1 June 1864
        HouseHouse of HongFatherHong Jingyang
        洪競揚MotherMadam Wang
        王氏Born1 January 1814
        Hua CountyGuangdongQing ChinaDied1 June 1864 (aged 50)
        TianjingTaiping Heavenly Kingdom
        Hong Xiuquan
        Chinese洪秀全
        Hong Renkun
        Chinese洪仁坤
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  1. Hong Xiuquan
  2. Hong Xiuquan, born Hong Renkun, courtesy name Huoxiu, was a Hakka Chinese who led the Taiping Rebellion against the Qing Dynasty, establishing the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom over varying portions of ... Wikipedia
  3. BornJanuary 1, 1814, Huadu District, China
  4. DiedJune 1, 1864, Nanjing, China

The 1911 Revolution led by Dr Sun Yat-sen finally overthrew the Qing government, and Sun established the First Republic of China, with himself as President, and Nanjing as the capital again.

  1. Sun Yat-sen
    Medical practitioner
  2. Sun Yat-sen was a Chinese revolutionary, first president and founding father of the Republic of China, and medical practitioner. Wikipedia
  3. BornNovember 12, 1866, Zhongshan
  4. DiedMarch 12, 1925, Beijing, China
  5. SpouseSoong Ching-ling (m. 1915–1925), Kaoru Otsuki (m. 1903–1906), Lu Muzhen (m. 1885–1915)




  1. Chiang Kai-shek
    Former President of the Republic of China
  2. Chiang Kai-shek was a Chinese political and military leader who served as the leader of the Republic of China between 1928 and 1975. He is known as Chiang Chung-cheng or Chiang Chieh-shih in Standard Chinese. Wikipedia
  3. BornOctober 31, 1887, Xikou, China
  4. DiedApril 5, 1975, Taipei, Taiwan
  5. SpouseSoong May-ling (m. 1927–1975),More


On April 18, 1927, Chiang Kai-shek launched his coup and made Nanjing his headquarters until 1937, when the Japanese Army invaded Nanjing, and Chiang and most of his Nationalist troops fled to Chongqing, where he established his new wartime capital. Nanjing witnessed the “Nanjing Massacre” by the invading Japanese Imperial Army troops. In six weeks from December 1937, the Japanese troops slaughtered more than 300,000 Chinese men, women and children including thousands of left-behind Chiang troops, and committed its infamous “Rape of Nanking” slaughtering, murder, disemboweled, rape some 80,000 Chinese women, out of this 300,000 killed.

Nanking Massacre (Rape of Nanking)
Part of the Second Sino-Japanese War of World War II
Nanking bodies 1937.jpg
Massacred victims on the shore of the Qinhuai River with a Japanese soldier standing nearby
DateDecember 13, 1937 – January 1938
LocationNanjingChina
Result50,000–300,000 dead (primary sources)[1][2]
40,000–300,000 dead (scholarly consensus)[3]
300,000 dead (Chinese government, scholarly consensus in China)[4][5][6]
Nanking Massacre
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese南京大屠殺
Simplified Chinese南京大屠杀
Japanese name
Kanji1. 南京大虐殺
2. 南京事件






The Rape of Nanking Images (WARNING!!! Graphic Content)


Rape of Nanking Images (Graphic Content)





These images are from the Japanese terror campaign in Nanking (Nanjing) in December 1937. 300,000 dead and 20,000 raped from an original population of 600k-700k.
Some of these photos were used as postcards to send back home.






The Japanese actually had contests to see who could kill 100 men first.
One of the contest involved throwing babies into the air and catching
them with samurai swords and bayonets

See what they did in The Rape of Nanking?

During this period, 300,000 Chinese civilians and disarmed combatants were murdered by soldiers of the Imperial Japanese. The International Military Tribunal for the Far East estimated that 20,000 women were
raped, including infants and the elderly. A large portion of these rapes were systematized in a process where soldiers would search door-to-door for young girls, with many women taken captive and gang raped. The women were often killed immediately after being raped, often through explicit mutilation or by stabbing a bayonet, long stick of bamboo, or other objects into the vagina. Young children were not exempt from these atrocities, and were cut open to allow Japanese soldiers to rape them.




Massacre

Eyewitness accounts of Westerners and Chinese present at Nanking in the weeks after the fall of the city say that over the course of six weeks following the fall of Nanking, Japanese troops engaged in rape, murder, theft, arson, and other war crimes. Some of these accounts came from foreigners who opted to stay behind in order to protect Chinese civilians from harm, including the diaries of John Rabe and American Minnie Vautrin.

Other accounts include first-person testimonies of Nanking Massacre survivors, eyewitness reports of journalists (both Western and Japanese), as well as the field diaries of military personnel. American
missionary John Magee stayed behind to provide a 16 mm film documentary and first-hand photographs of the Nanking Massacre.

A group of foreign expatriates headed by Rabe had formed the 15-man International Committee on November 22 and mapped out the Nanking Safety Zone in order to safeguard civilians in the city, where the population numbered from 200,000 to 250,000. Rabe and American missionary Lewis S.
C. Smythe, secretary of the International Committee and a professor of sociology at the University of Nanking, recorded the actions of the Japanese troops and filed complaints to the Japanese embassy.
Massacre contest

Read more at http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=2d5_1415662994#faxB7t37Y0Q8wECz.99


The above graphic images are from the Rape of Nanking perpetrated by the Japanese Imperial Army as they captured Nanking in December 1937, and in these six weeks of mayhem, looting, murder, rapes, they murdered, disembowelled and raped some 80,000 Chinese women and children.
To this day, this is only an "incident" in the psyche and mentality of the Japanese nation, and they have never admitted their atrocities here. Is it any wonder that the Chinese nation and its people - from 1937 and Chiang Kai-shek's time, to today, are relentless in their pursuit of justice from these dastardly Japanese evil deeds?
Nanjing regained some fame when it staged the Nanjing 2014 Summer Youth Olympic Games (YOG) from 16-28 August 2014, featuring over 3,500 athletes aged between 15 and 18 years old, competing in 28 sports, including shooting, wrestling and fencing.

Shanghai:

The role of history and modernity is also very evident in the Shanghai video. With a history of over 700 years, Shanghai today is the largest economic and transportation center in China, and the largest city in China, with 23.9 million people – the “city of skyscrapers” – in 2013, and is the largest city proper in the world as well. It has a population density of 3,700 people per square kilometer, or 9,700 people per square mile.

Shanghai began as Huating County, an administrative district established in 751 AD. In 991 AD, Shanghai Town was set up in the county. During the 1260-1274 period, the town evolved into an important trading port. On August 19, 1291, during the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), the then-central government approved the establishment of Shanghai County in this area. Hence, this day became the anniversary of the founding of the city of Shanghai.

In the 16th century (or the middle period of the Ming Dynasty), Shanghai became the national center of the textile and handicraft industry. In 1685, Shanghai set up its first customs office. After the First Opium War in 1839, Shanghai served as the major trading port and gateway to inland China. With the foreign imperial powers conquering China, Shanghai was turned into a semi-feudal and semi-colonial city for about 100 years. On May 27, 1949, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) of the Communist Party of China took control of Shanghai, and since then, Shanghai has undergone its historic and dramatic transformation.

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Shanghai has remained one of the fastest growing cities in the world for the last twenty years, with double-digit growth nearly every year since 1992, except during the global recession of 2008-2009. Shanghai has one of the highest life expectancies in the world, and the highest in mainland China, at 82.13 years.

Shanghai Population in 2010 Census:

According to the 2010 Census, Shanghai’s population was 89.3% (20.6 million) urban, and 10.7% (2.5 million) rural. More than 39% of Shanghai’s residents are long-term migrants, a number that has tripled in ten years, and some 80% of the population are from rural areas. These made up the largest percentage of the city’s population growth, as Shanghai’s natural growth rate has been negative since 1993 because of low fertility rates.

It is projected that Shanghai, along with Beijing, will have a population of some 50 million people by 2050, doubled the current level because of fast-paced urbanization in the region, and continuing economic growth.

China’s famous, or infamous one-child policy, has helped to keep the nation’s population in check. On the other hand, this has contributed to a shrinking workforce in the area, as well as a rapidly aging population in Shanghai, and, for that matter, the whole nation. For instance, as of 2009, of Shanghai’s registered residents, 8.3% of the total were under the age of 14, while 22.54% were over 60.

The Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway (HSR) Line:

Against Nanjing and Beijing for instance, Shanghai has no history or much culture to shout about, but its phenomenal economic growth is the envy of China, and the high-speed railway (HSR) Beijing-Shanghai line has no equals in China, or the world. Completed in 2010, and put into use in 2011, the 209 billion yuan rail line is 1,318 kilometers (820 miles) long, shortening the train ride between Beijing and Shanghai from 10 hours to 5.5 hours, at an average speed of 240kph (150mph).

The Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway Bullet (G) trains, as they are officially called, link Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai and the provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Anhui and Jiangsu, facilitating the transportation between these cities, and lowering costs compared to airline flights. The link makes access from Beijing/Shanghai to tourist locations like Nanjing, Mt Tai and Yellow Mountains (Huangshan) very convenient.

Wonder of Wonders: The Beijing-Shanghai HSR is expected to report an annual profit of 1.2 billion yuan (USD 192 million) in 2014, but experts warned that the same success may not be seen with other HSR lines. This is because more than 100 million passengers travelled on the Beijing-Shanghai HSR in 2014, a rise of 27% year-on-year, providing 30 billion yuan in ticket revenue, Xinhua news agency reported on January 26, 2015.

It is generally agreed that the “post-Olympics” effect for Beijing, arising from its hosting of the Olympic Games in 2008, has been mainly positive ones. Following on from the pre-Olympic facelift to the city’s living and business environment, Beijing has continued to experience tremendous growth, although various nationwide economic issues, and more importantly, a spill-over effect stemming from the deterioration in the external economic environment, contributed to a slowdown in momentum recently. However, the city continued to construct world-class infrastructure networks and commercial real estate offerings, paving the way for its transformation into one of the world’s largest city economies.

Many are aware of the rapid growth of the Chinese economy over the past six years, and Beijing has been a significant driver of that growth. In 2014, Beijing’s GDP rose to 2.133 trillion yuan (USD 343.38 billion), while the per capita GDP was 99,995 yuan. This new overall GDP represented an increase of 7.3% from 2013, where, at 1.95 trillion yuan (USD 319.08 billion), and per capital GDP of 94,238 yuan (USD 15,422), it ranked as No. 2 to Shanghai in 2013. Growth of the capital’s economy has largely mirrored that of the nation over the past six years, but Beijing posted an average annual growth rate of 9.5% - higher than No.1 Shanghai.

Shanghai’s GDP in 2014 expanded 7% from 2013 – less than the national average growth of 7.4% - and slowing from 2013’s 7.7% pace. The city’s overall GDP growth rose to 2.35 trillion yuan (USD 384 billion) in 2014, with the service sector producing 68.5 of the total.

So this traditional rivalry for economic supremacy goes on between Beijing and Shanghai. However, in one important aspect, Beijing has the upper hand over Shanghai: for instance, the Fortune Global 500 Companies For 2014 released in July 2014, show Chinese companies filling up 100 places in this List, increasing from 89 in 2013 to 95 for China-Mainland companies, mostly State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs), and the balance 5 from Taiwan and Hong Kong. Walmart of America took the top spot in this 2014 List, with USD 459.6 billion in revenue, Royal Dutch Shell No. 2, and China’s Sinopec Group became No. 3, overtaking ExxonMobil, with revenues of USD 457.2 billion.

History here is more important for Beijing’s status that modernity, since close proximity to the Chinese Central government and other regulatory bodies has made Beijing a strategic choice in which to locate for these top global Chinese enterprises. At least 86 of these top Chinese enterprises in the 2014 Fortune List have offices in Beijing, and over 50 of them have their HQ functions there as well. Having a Beijing address is not exclusive to the SOEs, since many of the foreign firms in this same List also have a presence in the capital city of China.


Finally, do you think there are more similarities or differences between the portrayals of Chinese cities seen here?

In China’s headlong rush to prosperity and modernity, its unrivalled economic growth over the past decade or so, have given rise to the huge growth of supercities or megacities, and, in most of these cases, we are seeing more similarities rather than differences, as each megacity – for example, in our Nanjing, Shanghai and Beijing basket case – strive to outdo the other. In this respect, my own view is that Beijing stands to benefit most – as it is the center of China’s government, and, in this respect more than any others, it stands to gain more than any other city in China.

But the problems of Beijing are, in a sense, symptomatic of China’s megacities, and we list below a few aspects:

·         Beijing has an estimated population of 21.516 million permanent residents at end 2014, 368,000 more than a year earlier. It is the third most populous city in China, after Chongqing and Shanghai. The city’s population is about the population of the whole of Australia!
·         Beijing’s population growth has slowed since 2011, and these are due to measures taken by the central and local governments to curb population growth in large cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.

·         The sheer size of Beijing’s population, which is also backed by a hefty pool of wealthy individuals, has bolstered the largest retail market in China, a trend which began when Beijing eclipsed Shanghai for the first time in 2008.

·         A very logical consequence of experiencing such a massive population is the potential stretch of the city’s infrastructure to capacity. For example, the last decade saw the subway track in Beijing quadrupled in length, and on December 28, 2104, Beijing opened four new subway lines, increasing the total subway length by 62 kilometers to 527 kilometers, making it one of the longest for a single city in the world. The city’s subway system carries approximately 10 million passengers daily on workdays. By 2020, the total subway length is expected to increase to 1,000 kilometers.

·         All these mega-projects and massive infrastructure works highlight the government’s continuous efforts in improving the intra-city connectivity of Beijing (and, also other cities, like our Nanjing and Shanghai for example), besides facilitating the sustainable development of decentralized areas.

The Hurun Wealth Report 2014:

·         On September 11, 2014, the Hurun Research Institute released its Hurun Wealth Report 2014, which provided a detailed analysis of the number of high net-worth individuals and their geographical distribution in China. Some salient points from this Report:

·         The country has 1,090,000 millionaires, and 67,000 super-rich, an increase of 3.8% and 3.7% respectively from 2013.

·         Beijing has the highest number of high net-worth individuals (HNWIs), classified as those with assets of more than RMB 10 million each, accounting for 192,000 millionaires, or 17.6% of total, followed by Guangdong (180,000 and 16.5%), and Shanghai (159,000 and 14.6%). Nanjing, as a city, is not listed among this Top 10 Cities. It is stated as having 13,400 millionaires, of which 920 are in the super-rich category.

·         For the Super-Rich, Beijing again topped the List with 11,300 and 16.9% of total, followed by Guangdong (10,000 and 14.9%), and Shanghai (9,100 and 13.6%).4 of 6
Wang Jianlin

           Wang Jianlin, Chinese richest man today, beating Jack Ma of Alibaba, which is now second richest.

In terms of billionaires in USD, Beijing ranked in the top five – behind Moscow, New York, and Hong Kong, but ahead of London. Beijing is expected to become the world’s fifth largest city economy in 2025. Moreover, while Shanghai will also be ranked as one of the top five largest city economies, Beijing is the only current Tier-1 Chinese city that is listed among their top ten fastest growing economies in the world.

Beijing Airports:

Beijing currently has two international airports – the Beijing Capital International Airport (BCA) and Beijing Nanyuan Airport. BCA alone in 2014 handled 86,130,390 passengers – far exceeding its projected annual capacity of 76 million passengers by 2015. It is the second busiest airport in the world, behind Atlanta Hartsfied-Jackson International Airport in the United States, which handled 96,178,899 passengers in 2014.

Beijing’s proposed new international airport in Daxing, about 48 kilometers south of Tiananmen Square, is scheduled to open in late 2018. It is planned to have six runways for civil use, and one for military use, and will service up to 70 million passengers per year by 2025. This will ensure that Beijing will continue to be one of, if not the busiest, airport traffic hubs in China.

Thus, in this Beijing example, I believe we can see more similarities than differences in the planning, expansion and future outlook, especially of China’s many megacities, paying greater efforts in expanding and refining its infrastructure networks. All government initiatives will set a very good platform of economic activity in Beijing and all other cities – most of which are megacities in terms of population – which, barring unforeseen circumstances, will continue to roll on in the years ahead.

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