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US Commerce Secretary calls China 2025 plan 'frightening' by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) April 24, 2018 China's plan to transform itself into the global technology nexus is a "frightening" one that puts American intellectual property at risk, US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said Tuesday. "It's a huge, huge problem," Ross told a gathering of fabric industry executives about the repeated theft of technology. "And it's not going away." He said Beijing's development plan -- Made in China 2025 -- maps out the country's strategy to dominate "every hot industry" from space to telecommunications to robotics to electric cars. "They have been the factory floor of the world, now their vision is to be the technology center for the world," Ross said. "What they are really trying to do is take their immense trade surplus from the conventional industries of today...and plow them into semiconductor research and every kind of research you can imagine." Washington last month threatened steep tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods, because of policies it says aim to steal technology, and also filed a complaint at the World Trade Organization. That ratcheted up tensions between the two countries and they have exchanged increasingly severe tariff threats. But US President Donald Trump on Tuesday confirmed that Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer would travel to Beijing in "a few days" at China's request. Ross has previously called China's strategy a direct threat to the United States and Lighthizer said the imports targeted for tariffs were in the industries that are the focus of the 2025 plan. Ross also warned the fabric industry representatives on Tuesday that China was even reviewing US patents and filing them in their home country to prevent the legitimate owners of the technology from selling their ideas in China. He warned them to think about "protecting your own assets" as they try to export their products.
Chinese ship conducting research near disputed islets: Japan Tokyo (AFP) April 20, 2018 Japan said Friday that a Chinese vessel was carrying out a suspected maritime research in Tokyo's exclusive economic zone near the disputed islands in the East China Sea. A Japanese patrol boat confirmed that the Chinese research ship was sailing on Thursday and Friday by extending a wire into the sea some 150 kilometres (93 miles) northeast of one of the Senkaku islands, a coastguard spokesman said. "We told them to stop the research activities but they have not reacted to our instruction," the ... read more
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