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China’s Ukraine peace talks gambit shows shifts amid hard realities

REUTERS

BEIJING — China’s decision to join international talks in Saudi Arabia this weekend seeking to end Russia’s war in Ukraine signals possible shifts in Beijing’s approach but not a U-turn in its support for Moscow, analysts say.

While Beijing declined to join earlier talks in NATO member Denmark, analysts said it feels far more comfortable joining the effort in Saudi Arabia, even if Russia is not present and Ukraine is pushing its own plan.

China has refused to condemn Moscow for the invasion it launched in February 2022 but has offered its own peace plan, Beijing appears to be confronting some hard realities as the conflict drags on.

“Beijing has been gearing more toward peace efforts but it also knows that a peace initiative led by Beijing is unlikely to be embraced by the West at this point,” said Yun Sun, a director of the China program at the Stimson Center think tank in Washington.

“Beijing will not want to be absent from other credible peace initiatives that are led by non-Western countries.”

Peace envoy Li Hui was joining senior officials from some 40 countries in Jeddah, China’s foreign ministry said on Friday, for talks that Ukrainian and Western envoys hope will forge key principles for an eventual settlement to end the war.

Beijing’s latest move on the global diplomatic stage comes as President Xi Jinping grapples with a host of internal issues, including the unexplained replacement last month of Qin Gang as foreign minister, the abrupt replacement of the top brass at the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force and deepening woes for the world’s second-biggest economy.

China did not attend the talks in Copenhagen in late June, despite being invited and having proposed its own 12-point plan for peace.

Beijing has maintained close economic and diplomatic ties with Russia since President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion and has accused US-led Western forces of seeking to prolong the conflict by providing arms and support to Ukraine.

The foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment over the weekend.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba called Mr. Li’s involvement a “considerable breakthrough”, according to Ukrainian media.

China has been courting oil giant Saudi Arabia, which is part of the non-aligned Global South, a grouping China is keen to lead.

Russia is eventually “bound to be defeated,” said Shanghai-based international relations scholar Shen Dingli, so China must look for international cooperation while not accelerating any collapse in Russia.

“We can put forward different opinions, and we can also put forward some suggestions to jointly promote the early and proper political settlement of problems we see,” Mr. Shen said. 

While China’s move was good for its image, Singapore-based analyst Li Mingjiang said Beijing would be looking to fine-tune its positions.

It wants to better understand others’ positions and “is probably also trying to explore a space of China’s own adaptability, China’s own maneuverability,” said Li, an associate professor of international relations at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

That evolution was occurring as some analysts detect mounting Chinese angst at the protracted nature of the war and Russia’s recent bombing of Ukrainian grain ports, upsetting previously protected shipments from the global grain powerhouse.

Geng Shuang, China’s deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, told the Security Council on July 26 that his delegation was deeply concerned there seemed to be no end to the war.

“Now the situation is increasingly complex for Beijing to maneuver, as the escalation of the war directly impacts China’s economic and political interests,” said Moritz Rudolf, a scholar at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. — Reuters

X to pay legal bills of people ‘unfairly treated’ for posting on platform

‘X’ logo is seen on the top of the headquarters of the messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter, in downtown San Francisco, California, US, July 30, 2023. — REUTERS/CARLOS BARRIA

ELON Musk has said his X social media platform will pay the legal bills and sue on the behalf of people who have been treated unfairly by employers because of posting or liking something on the site formerly known as Twitter.

“If you were unfairly treated by your employer due to posting or liking something on this platform, we will fund your legal bill,” Mr. Musk said in a post on X late on Saturday, adding that there will be no limits to funding the bills.

“And we won’t just sue, it will be extremely loud, and we will go after the boards of directors of the companies too,” Musk said later in response to a post about nothing changing behavior in the US faster than a threat of legal action.

Late last month, Mr. Musk said that monthly users of X reached a “new high” and shared a graph that showed the latest count as over 540 million.

The figures came as the company is going through organizational changes and is looking to boost falling advertising revenue.

It was also the latest in a series of comments from X executives claiming strong traction in usage, after Meta Platforms launched a competing platform called Threads on July 5.

After 17 years with an iconic blue bird logo that came to symbolize the broadcasting of ideas to the world, billionaire Mr. Musk renamed Twitter as X and unveiled a new logo in July, marking a focus on building an “everything app.”

Mr. Musk earlier in July had said that the platform’s cash flow remains negative because of a nearly 50% drop in advertising revenue and a heavy debt load. An upturn in advertising revenue that had been expected in June failed to materialize. — Reuters

Hiroshima marks A-bomb anniversary, mayor calls nuclear deterrence ‘folly’

THE ATOMIC BOMB DOME is seen in front of the venue holding a ceremony to mark the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombing at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan, Aug. 6, 2020. — KYODO/VIA REUTERS

TOKYO — Japan on Sunday marked the 78th anniversary of the US atomic bombing on Hiroshima, where its mayor urged the abolition of nuclear weapons and called the Group of Seven (G7) leaders’ notion of nuclear deterrence a “folly.”

The day to commemorate the victims of the world’s first nuclear attack comes as Russia has raised the specter of using nuclear weapons in its war with Ukraine.

It also comes as biopic Oppenheimer, chronicling the creation of the atomic bomb, has become a box-office hit in the United States. Some have criticized the film for largely ignoring the weapons’ destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki — bombed three days later, on Aug. 9, 1945.

The film’s release in Japan has yet to be announced.

Also causing controversy in Japan, the distributor of Barbie, a blockbuster released on the same day as Oppenheimer, latched on to fan-produced “Barbenheimer” memes that depicted the actors in the title roles alongside images of nuclear blasts.

Hiroshima was in the spotlight in May, where Prime Minister Fumio Kishida hosted a G7 summit in the western city, his home constituency. G7 leaders issued a statement expressing their commitment to achieving disarmament but said that as long as nuclear weapons existed, they should serve to deter aggression and prevent war.

On Sunday, a peace bell tolled at 8:15 a.m. (2315 GMT on Saturday), the time the bomb was dropped. About 50,000 participants in the outdoor memorial ceremony including ageing survivors observed a moment of silence, with the summer heat hitting 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit)

“Leaders around the world must confront the reality that nuclear threats now being voiced by certain policymakers reveal the folly of nuclear deterrence theory,” Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui said at the ceremony, also attended by Mr. Kishida.

The prime minister said the road to a world without nuclear weapons was getting steeper, due in part to Russia’s nuclear threats, but that this made it all the more important to bring back international momentum towards that goal.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed his support.

“World leaders have visited this city, seen its monuments, spoken with its brave survivors, and emerged emboldened to take up the cause of nuclear disarmament,” he said in remarks read by a U.N. representative. “More should do so, because the drums of nuclear war are beating once again.”

The bomb dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, nicknamed “Little Boy”, killed thousands instantly and about 140,000 by the end of the year. Japan surrendered on Aug. 15. — Reuters

Closing youth festival in Portugal, pope shares ‘old man’s’ dream of peace

LISBON — Pope Francis closed an international festival of Catholic Youth on Sunday with a huge outdoor Mass and his own “I have a dream” speech, saying it was for world peace, especially for Ukraine.

About 1.5 million people attended his closing Mass at a riverside park in the Portuguese capital, the Vatican said, quoting local authorities. Many of the faithful slept outdoors, having attending a vigil there on Saturday night, and they gathered in sweltering heat.

Speaking after the Mass, the 86-year-old Francis urged the young people to take the fraternal experiences of the six-day jamboree back home and apply them to their daily lives.

“Dear friends, allow me, this old man, to share with you young people a dream that I carry within me: it is the dream of peace, the dream of young people praying for peace, living in peace and building a peaceful future,” Francis said.

“As you return home, please continue to pray for peace. What is more, you are a sign of peace for the world, showing how different nationalities, languages and histories can unite instead of divide. You are the hope of a different world,” he said.

He asked them to think of the young people who could not come to the event because of the world’s many armed conflicts and wars, adding: “In thinking of this continent, I feel great sorrow for beloved Ukraine, which continues to suffer greatly.”

The pope, who was returning to Rome on Sunday evening after an event to thank volunteers at the World Youth Day festival, met a delegation of 15 young people from Ukraine during his trip.

10,000 PRIESTS ON HAND
Sunday’s Mass was concelebrated by 700 bishops and 10,000 priests, who distributed communion to the huge crowd.

Marina Sylvester, 22, from the pope’s native Argentina, was one of hundreds of thousands of young people who spent the night in the riverside area.

She woke up at dawn and by 7 a.m. she was already showing off her dance moves as a well-known Portuguese priest DJ, Guilherme, played upbeat songs. “It has been one of the best experiences of my life,” she said.

The pope announced that the next World Youth Day would be held in Seoul, South Korea in 2027.

One of the recurring themes of the pope’s visit was social media and its potentially negative effects on young people.

During the week, the pope urged them to beware the false happiness lurking in the virtual world and at another event, the young people themselves reflected on their anxieties, enslavement to the “tyranny” of social media and yearning to save the planet.

The trip took place in the shadow of a report six months ago by a Portuguese commission said at least 4,815 minors were sexually abused by clergy — mostly priests — over seven decades in the country.

It was just one in a series of reports around the world that have exposed clerical sex abuse and rattled the Catholic Church in recent years.

Francis said on Wednesday the Church needs a “humble and ongoing purification” to deal with the “anguished cries” of victims of clerical sexual abuse, and met privately with 13 victims. — Reuters

Pinay booters booked for Asian Games and AFC Olympic Qualifying tourney

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

WHILE enjoying a well-deserved breather and the adulation of Pinoy fans in comfy Manila, the Filipinas are ready to get back to work soon and go through another round of tough training with two major competitions on the horizon.

On the heels of their historic stint in the FIFA Women’s World Cup (WC), the Pinay booters are booked for the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China in September and the AFC Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament in October in Australia.

“Next order of business is (to) regroup, refocus on what’s coming up,” goalkeeper Olivia McDaniel said after the team’s motorcade and meet and greet activity in BGC in Taguig Saturday.

“And if any one of us gets a call, we’ll be happy to answer and be able to play for our flag and country.”

The Filipinas, who marked their amazing WC debut with a milestone 1-0 win over host New Zealand, are taking part in the Asiad for the first time. They’re grouped with South Korea, Hong Kong and Myanmar in Pool E in the Sept. 19 to Oct. 7 Continental meet.

Afterwards, it’s back to the field, this time for the second-round hostilities in the race for seats to the Paris Olympiad. The Filipinas are bunched with Australia, Chinese-Taipei and Iran in Group A play in Perth from Oct. 26 to Nov. 1.

For now, though, the Philippines’ pride is savoring time with families and kababayans (countrymen), away from the intense atmosphere they had been in pre-World Cup.

“It was a very long 18 months…so for now, we’re definitely resting and getting our bearings again, visiting our fans and loved ones, trying to fill up our cups here and also at home,” said co-skipper Hali Long.

“(At the same time) Just getting our minds, bodies, souls and emotions right to hopefully make you all proud again,” she added.

The Filipinas also have to wait for the Philippine Football Federation’s anointed one, who will guide them in their next ventures. Alen Stajcic, the Australian who whipped them into WC shape, left after his contract ended and signed with Perth Glory in his native country.

“We still have our entire team. We still have our core values, everything,” said midfielder Quinley Quezada. “We’re excited for who our new coach will be and I’m just excited to move forward.” — Olmin Leyba

Surfer Jay-R Esquivel advances to semifinals of Wallex US Open

JAY-R ESQUIVEL — FACEBOOK.COM/JAYRESQUIVELSURF-@TINAHDAYNS @DINEEES

FILIPINO Jay-R Esquivel kept making big waves as he bested American Richie Cravey to claim a spot in the semifinals of the Huntington Beach Longboard Classic of the Wallex US Open in Huntington Beach Pier in Southern California yesterday (Aug. 6).

The proud son of San Juan, La Union was nothing short of fantastic in stunning current North American champion and came through with a 14.13 as against the latter’s 7.40.

The 2019 Southeast Asian Games silver medalist was unperturbed by Mr. Cravey’s interference late in the heat knowing victory is already at hand.

It was a triumph that spoiled an all-American semis cast as three-time world longboard king Taylor Jensen, Tony Silvagni and Kaniela Stewart all made it through the finals day.

Entering the quarters, Esquivel shocked 2022 WSL Longboard Tour veteran Ben Skinner of the United Kingdom.

Mr. Esquivel, whose last triumph came in the Padrol Longboard Classic in Bali, Indonesia recently, also hurdled past Silvagni and Kevin Skvarna of the United States when he debuted a few days ago.

The top surfers here will inch closer toward qualification to the 2024 Championship Tour while also getting a chance to earn points in becoming the best in the sport in the whole planet.

And there is a golden opportunity that Mr. Esquivel could achieve both. — Joey Villar

Cavitex shoots for first hat-trick win after ruling Leg 4, 5 of First Conference

CAVITEX shoots for the first hat trick of wins in the PBA 3×3 Season 3 First Conference hostilities as the battle for Leg 6 honors fires off today at the Ayala Malls Trinoma.

The Braves have gone on a tear in the season-opening tournament, ruling Legs 4 and 5 after three straight third-place finishes to set the pace in the overall team standings with one stop left before the Grand Finals.

Fresh from their fifth-leg triumph last week, Dominick Fajardo, Jorey Napoles and Bong Galanza return for another run with 3×3 veteran Tonino Gonzaga joining the campaign in place of Ken Ighalo.

The Braves tackle Leg 3 winner TNT Triple Giga and Blackwater Smooth Razor in the preliminaries in Pool A.

Barangay Ginebra, the only other two-time winner in the competition, also eyes a third leg win in Pool C.

Gin Kings Donald Gumaru, Ralph Cu, Ralph Salcedo and Kim Aurin, the Leg 1 and 2 victors, face NorthPort, Terrafirma and San Miguel Beer in the elims.

Pioneer Elastoseal’s Gian Abrigo, Reggie Morido, Wilson Baltazar and Dennice Villamor, meanwhile, continue the franchise’s bid for a breakthrough in Pool B.

The Katibays, second-placers to the Braves in Leg 5 and the Triple Giga in Leg 3, battle it out with Meralco, Purefoods and Wilcon Depot for the two tickets from this group to tomorrow’s KO rounds. — Olmin Leyba

Netherlands march past South Africa into Women’s World Cup quarterfinals

SYDNEY — Jill Roord scored her fourth goal of the tournament as the Netherlands marched into the quarterfinals of the Women’s World Cup with a 2-0 win over South Africa at Sydney Football Stadium on Sunday.

Ms. Roord’s header gave her side an early lead and Lineth Beerensteyn added the second goal courtesy of a goalkeeping error in the second half to secure the Dutch a date with Spain in Wellington on Friday.

The 54th-ranked African champions never gave up the fight in their first appearance in the World Cup knockout stage and were always a threat on the break through their lone striker Thembi Kgatlana.

Dutch goalkeeper Daphne van Domselaar was equal to everything Banyana Banyana fired at her, however, and the 2019 finalists progressed to the last eight for the second successive tournament.

The noon kickoff — primetime in the United States — was tailor-made for the reigning champion Americans, but they were packed off to Melbourne to face Sweden later on Sunday after the Netherlands hammered Vietnam 7-0 to win Group E.

The Dutch started well, taking the lead from a corner in the ninth minute, when Danielle van de Donk headed the ball towards goal and defender Lebohang Ramalepe got in goalkeeper Kaylin Swart’s way to present Ms. Roord with a simple finish.

Banyana Banyana responded immediately, striker Thembi Kgatlana’s fine first touch on a through ball, giving her space to unleash a shot that forced a save out of Ms. Van Domselaar.

Ms. Kgatlana was a constant warning to the Dutch against complacency.

She got three shots away in the 10 minutes before halftime that tested Ms. Van Domselaar, who also had to be at her best to stop a Kholosa Biyana piledriver in stoppage time.

Ten minutes into the second half, winger Lieke Martens had a goal disallowed for offside, but the Dutch did double the lead in the 68th minute.

Beerensteyn was played through and shot across Swart, who appeared to have the everything under control but fumbled her catch and watched the ball squirt into the net.

South Africa again responded to conceding a goal but Ms. Van Domselaar was again equal to it, getting down low to turn Linda Motlhalo’s low drive around the post five minutes later. — Reuters

GM Eugene Torre rules Guam International Open Chess tourney

RAFAEL REX FELISILDA-UNSPLASH

FILIPINO Grandmaster Eugene (GM) Torre came back from retirement in topping the 2023 Guam International Open Chess Tournament at the Dusit Beach Resort in Guam over the weekend.

The chess Hall-of-Famer and Asia’s first GM went perfect by winning all his nine games in the standard tournament organized by the Guam Chess Federation and sanctioned by FIDE.

Mr. Torre’s wins came at the expense of William Gunn, Daniel Combs, Cyle Sarmiento, Rudolph P. Soriano, Kohei Yonemitsu, Daniel Doria, Elmer Prudente, Kyle Garrison and Rogelio L. Orio.

Meanwhile, Louie Salvador edged Kahlel Abris via tiebreak after the two ended up tied with seven points apiece to rule a tournament sponsored by National Master Marlon Bernardino.

Salvador pocketed P10,000 while Abris P6,000 in the seven-round tournament that drew participation by 242 woodpushers including some of the country’s top masters. — Joey Villar

Davis’ worth

As big as the story played out in sports circles over the weekend, the Lakers’ decision to extend Anthony Davis’ contract by three years at a cost of up to $186 million (depending on annual salary cap spikes) was, in fact, a no-brainer. Forget that he didn’t make any All-NBA or All-Defensive Team, wasn’t voted an All-Star, and continued to be piled on by talking heads only too eager to catch eyeballs at the risk of truth. As far as the purple and gold were concerned, he delivered exactly as promised: He was a force on offense and, more importantly, anchored the defense to the point where opponents needed to make significant adjustments  to stay competitive.

Perhaps therein lies the problem. Considering the way the game is structured and in view of changes to National Basketball Association rules, offense is given primacy; generation — as opposed to prevention — of points is seen as more entertaining, even from the vantage point of supposedly objective observers. Not that Davis isn’t a superior point producer; his rare combination of length, versatility, and athleticism counts him among the best of the best in the league. That said, his seeming inconsistency in the most prominent traditional counting stat is being held against him — as if other marquee names don’t go through similar ebbs and flows.

The same can be said of Davis’ absences due to a cacophony of injuries. Naysayers underscore his capacity to suit up on only three-fourths of the Lakers’ regular season matches over the years as proof of his malleability and softness. If this were to be a valid gauge, however, then why have such notables as Stephen Curry, Kawhi Leonard, and Paul George, with more missed games to their name, escaped notice? Whether because he’s in La-La Land or sharing the court with LeBron James, both magnets for increased scrutiny, he’s most certainly being held to a higher standard.

In any case, there can be no doubting Davis’ worth. If anything, it can be reasonably argued that he’s a bargain at the extension price. Juxtaposed with, say, the monster deal that second-fiddle Jaylen Brown received from the Celtics, its soundness becomes even more pronounced. And he clearly gave the Lakers a sweetheart arrangement; he could have angled for an extension next year and received more for a far longer period. Bottom line, he gets what he deserves, and, in turn, will provide what he can — as only he can. It’s a win-win development even the loudest of the so-called armchair experts will be hard-pressed to depreciate.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Tampakan copper-gold mine may begin operations in 2026

MEMBERS of indigenous communities join a 2022 pro-responsible mining rally in Koronadal City, capital of South Cotabato where the Tampakan copper-gold project is located. — JOHN M. UNSON

The Philippines’ biggest mining project, the Tampakan copper-gold site in Mindanao, may begin commercial operations in the last quarter of 2026 at the earliest, project developer Sagittarius Mines, Inc. said on Friday.

Regulatory concerns over the Tampakan project, which had been hampered by a 12-year provincial ban on open-pit mining that was lifted last year, have been “reduced to almost zero”, Sagittarius president and Chief Executive Officer Roy O. Deveraturda said in a speech at an industry forum.

“The most optimistic estimate is last quarter of 2026, but you know sometimes we experience delays because of supply chain issues,” he told Reuters after his speech.

Tampakan will have a life of more than 40 years, with development costs for what is believed to be one of the world’s largest copper deposits now seen at $1.1 billion. The costs may be financed by a combination of debt and equity, he said.

The project in the southern province of South Cotabato covers an area of about 10,000 hectares (24,710 acres) and is estimated to contain 15 million tons of copper and 17.6 million ounces of gold.

Sagittarius, fully owned by Filipino company Indophil Resources Phils. Inc., is open to new investors, including foreigners, Mr. Deveraturda said.

The lifting of the Southeast Asian country’s ban on open-pit mining and the moratorium on new mineral agreements has ushered in a new era for a sector hit by years of restrictive domestic policies that scared off foreign investors.

Bringing in foreign partners was “very important (because) if you have an international collaboration, you are telling the whole world that the Philippines is open or a good place for investment”, Mr. Deveraturda said.

Mining has been a contentious issue in the Philippines after past cases of environmental mismanagement fueled a strong lobby against the industry and prompted the government to impose restrictions. — Reuters

TikTok in talks to gain Indonesian payments license

SOLEN FEYISSA-UNSPLASH

JAKARTA – TikTok told Reuters it is in early-stage talks with regulators to obtain a payments license in Indonesia, a move that would further its e-commerce ambitions in a major market at a time when it is under intensifying scrutiny in the US and elsewhere.

The news follows an announcement by TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew in June that the short video platform would invest billions of dollars in Indonesia and the rest of Southeast Asia.

Two sources briefed on the plan said TikTok, which is owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance, was in discussions with Indonesia’s central bank and that the application was being viewed favorably.

A spokesperson for TikTok confirmed on Friday that the talks were taking place, adding that an Indonesian payments license would help local creators and sellers on its platform.

The sources declined to be identified as the negotiations were confidential. A representative for the central bank, Bank Indonesia, did not respond to a request for comment.

A payments license would enable TikTok to benefit from transaction fees and put it more directly in competition with Southeast Asian e-commerce giants, Sea’s Shopee and Alibaba’s Lazada.

TikTok has 125 million Indonesian users per month – on par with its user figures for Europe and not too far behind the US, where it has 150 million.

Douyin, the Chinese counterpart to TikTok that is also owned by ByteDance, obtained a Chinese payments license in 2020. It was not immediately clear if TikTok has obtained a payments license elsewhere in the world. ByteDance and TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment on licenses.

Indonesia, with a population of more than 270 million, accounted for nearly $52 billion worth of e-commerce transactions last year, according to data from consultancy Momentum Works. Of that, 5% took place on TikTok, principally through live-streaming, it said.

TikTok plans to launch an e-commerce platform to sell China-made goods in the United States this month. It has told Reuters it does not plan to launch the service in Indonesia, where senior officials have expressed concern that the country could be flooded with Chinese-made imports.

TikTok has faced growing concern in the US about possible Chinese government influence over it. The White House and many US state governments have banned its use on government devices and the state of Montana plans to ban it altogether from next year.

The company has stated it has not shared, and would not share US user data with the Chinese government, and has taken substantial measures to protect the privacy and security of TikTok users.

Australia and Canada have also banned the use of TikTok on government devices. — Reuters

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