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Are China's cheap loans to poor nations a development boost or a debt trap?


China has 26% vote share in AIIB, while India has 7.5%. India is the second largest share holder in AIIB.

lol at you delusion.

BTW , what is the interest rate ?

Good for you, we tend to always believe that we are not good enough.

Many share that sentiment. Do you consider yourself Dalit ?
 
OK, Thank you for listing those rumor mongers, next time you will know what news channels you should not go to.

https://thediplomat.com/2017/07/china-clarifies-reports-of-vpn-ban/

China Clarifies Reports of VPN Ban
China counters media reports that it plans to ban personal VPNs.


On July 10, Bloomberg revealed that China’s government has required the three big Chinese telecommunications firms — China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom — to ban individuals’ access to virtual private networks, or VPNs, by February 1. A VPN is a third-party service that routes web traffic through servers in another country or location. As netizens in China have been suffering from the torture of the Great Firewall (GFW) for years and VPNs are the only resort for people to get access to the international internet, Bloomberg’s report was immediately widely spread across China — despite the fact that Bloomberg itself is also blocked by GFW.

Although the news is not a thunder from a clear sky — as The Diplomat has reported, China declared its decision to crackdown on VPNs earlier in January 2017 — Bloomberg’s report and the detailed timeline still give Chinese netizens a new blow.

On July 12, the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology finally replied to the report, claiming that “ the foreign media reported falsely” and the ministry hasn’t “issued such a notice.”

Ironically, the Ministry’s further explanation did actually partly confirm Bloomberg’s report. The Ministry told thepaper.cn, a Chinese news website:

The new regulation issued in January this year won’t affect the domestic and foreign enterprises and the majority of users who legally get access to the internet… The object of the new regulation is those unauthorized enterprises and individuals who haven’t got the licence to use VPNs… As for those foreign trade enterprises and multinational companies who need to get access to cross-border network, they can rent VPNs from those authorized carriers according to the law…

However, the Ministry neither elaborated on the law nor clarified who could be authorized to use a VPN. As usual, the issue becomes a new gray area, where nearly anyone could have broken the law without knowing it.

As The Diplomat has repeatedly reported, China has launched a series of regulations to tighten internet control recently. Regarding the issue of VPNs, the ban, whether limited to unauthorized VPNs or not, will not only affect millions of netizens’ daily lives, but also numerous enterprises operating in China. As China keeps boasting its ambition to defend global trade and internationalization, its increasingly tight controls on the internet can’t be conducive to the big picture.

China and west are very good friends.

India and china are very good friend too. Dint you just say that you gave maximum loans to India via AIIB ? :D
 
https://thediplomat.com/2017/07/china-clarifies-reports-of-vpn-ban/

China Clarifies Reports of VPN Ban
China counters media reports that it plans to ban personal VPNs.


On July 10, Bloomberg revealed that China’s government has required the three big Chinese telecommunications firms — China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom — to ban individuals’ access to virtual private networks, or VPNs, by February 1. A VPN is a third-party service that routes web traffic through servers in another country or location. As netizens in China have been suffering from the torture of the Great Firewall (GFW) for years and VPNs are the only resort for people to get access to the international internet, Bloomberg’s report was immediately widely spread across China — despite the fact that Bloomberg itself is also blocked by GFW.

Although the news is not a thunder from a clear sky — as The Diplomat has reported, China declared its decision to crackdown on VPNs earlier in January 2017 — Bloomberg’s report and the detailed timeline still give Chinese netizens a new blow.

On July 12, the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology finally replied to the report, claiming that “ the foreign media reported falsely” and the ministry hasn’t “issued such a notice.”

Ironically, the Ministry’s further explanation did actually partly confirm Bloomberg’s report. The Ministry told thepaper.cn, a Chinese news website:

The new regulation issued in January this year won’t affect the domestic and foreign enterprises and the majority of users who legally get access to the internet… The object of the new regulation is those unauthorized enterprises and individuals who haven’t got the licence to use VPNs… As for those foreign trade enterprises and multinational companies who need to get access to cross-border network, they can rent VPNs from those authorized carriers according to the law…

However, the Ministry neither elaborated on the law nor clarified who could be authorized to use a VPN. As usual, the issue becomes a new gray area, where nearly anyone could have broken the law without knowing it.

As The Diplomat has repeatedly reported, China has launched a series of regulations to tighten internet control recently. Regarding the issue of VPNs, the ban, whether limited to unauthorized VPNs or not, will not only affect millions of netizens’ daily lives, but also numerous enterprises operating in China. As China keeps boasting its ambition to defend global trade and internationalization, its increasingly tight controls on the internet can’t be conducive to the big picture.
Bloomberg , good a rumor spreader spotted with your help.
 

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