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Typhoon Haiyan: China gives less aid to Philippines than Ikea

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The Comedy Central host calls on his followers to donate more money to the Philippines than China’s measly $100,000 pledge

Stephen Colbert invited his Colbert Nation to top China’s pathetic aid sum for Philippines typhoon relief Thursday — and somehow, the “Report” host made it all funny.

China has promised $100,000 to support disaster relief in the Philippines. By comparison, the Unites States provided $20 million in immediate aid, along with boots on the ground, aircraft and the U.S.S. George Washington. China the real super power? Colbert doesn’t think so.

“Folks, America takes a lot of flack just because we spy on our allies, invade countries on hunches and threaten to tank the global economy as a fundraising tool,” Colbert joked. He added, “But face it: when the s— goes down and the world needs heroes, nobody says, ‘Thank God, the Belgians are here! I hope they brought us some waffles.’”

“Seriously, the nation on China pledged only $100,000? I bet the Colbert Nation could give more than that,” the Comedy Central host said, asking his loyal audience to text “Colbert” to 50555 to donate $10 to Convoy of Hope.

With the important humanitarian stuff out of the way, Colbert got to the real comedy. Not to be outdone by the “Today” show’s Matt Lauer and Al Roker getting prostate exams live on the air last week, Colbert got in on the men’s health awareness with his “November Sweeps Prosctacular.”

Stephen Colbert Tries to Top China's Typhoon Donation, 'Today' Show's Prostate Exam (Video) - TheWrap
 
Old news,
China to donate another 10 million RMB in aid to the Philippines
China to donate another 10 million RMB in aid to the Philippines CCTV News - CNTV English

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang says China will provide an additional emergency humanitarian aid package worth 10 million yuan to the Philippine government as the situation in the aftermath of Typhoon "Haiyan" worsens.

Previously, China had initially pledged 1.6 million yuan worth of relief supplies in the form of tents and blankets.

So total 1.8million $ of China, and Hongkong provide 50million HKD(6.45million$), Philippine still don't want pay Reparation of Hongkong Hostage deaths in Philippine, even 3 years passed
 
Cheapskate China Wins No Friends in Philippines
By William Pesek Nov 15, 2013

As hundreds of thousands of Filipinos struggled to find food, water, shelter and the bodies of loved ones in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan, China quickly dipped into its world-leading $3.7 trillion of currency reserves and came up with … all of $100,000.

That was Beijing’s first miserly offer of aid to the storm-tossed Philippines. By Thursday, an international outcry over China’s stinginess shamed it into upping its pledge to a modest $1.6 million worth of relief materials such as tents and blankets. But the damage was already done.

“It’s very hard to call for de-Americanization and then leave your wallet at home when there’s a human disaster the scale of the typhoon in the Philippines,” says Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group in New York. “Yes, China is a poor country. Yes, they have troubled relations with the Philippines. But this sits badly with anyone thinking about China’s rise in the region.” If he were advising President Xi Jinping, Bremmer says, “I’d push for major humanitarian aid to the Philippines.”

Instead the bulk of that aid is coming from elsewhere: more than $28 million from Australia, $20 million from the U.S., $17 million from the European Union, $16 million from the U.K., $10 million from Japan, $5 million from South Korea, $4 million from the Vatican, $2 million from Indonesia, and huge amounts from official agencies -- the United Nations alone started a $300 million aid appeal.

China was clearly stung by the critical news coverage. South Korean figure skater Kim Yu-na herself gave $100,000 -- about enough to buy nine bottles of a 2006 Romanee-Conti. Even the new Chinese offer is rather paltry. New Zealand’s $167 billion economy is a rounding error compared with China’s $8.4 trillion one. Yet officials in Wellington have coughed up $1.7 million, even more than the People’s Republic.

Insulting Sum

Why the insultingly small sum for a geopolitically vital nation of 106 million people that by many measures is much poorer than China? Manila’s close ties with Washington have always worried China. But this is personal. Philippine President Benigno Aquinorefuses to bow to China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea, and enraged Beijing by daring to challenge its maritime claims before a UN-endorsed tribunal. Aquino also demands that China treat the Philippines, one of Asia’s oldest democracies, as an equal, not a subordinate.

Nations hold grudges, of course. But China’s actions this week dramatically undercut what had been a very deliberate and strenuous -- and supposedly successful -- recent charm offensive. After President Barack Obama skipped out on a summit of Asia-Pacific leaders last month, Xi and Premier Li Keqiang gleefully toured Southeast Asian capitals, handing out investment deals to show how generous China could be with its neighbors, how eager it was for friendly relations.

The Philippines crisis offered an opportunity for China to show it had developed into a mature, cooperative nation and to win goodwill across the region. As a matter of fact, on Friday, Chinese and U.S. troops will even train together for the first time in Hawaii, as part of a drill in which the two nations cooperate in a humanitarian relief operation in a third country. Why not jump in and seek to cooperate in the enormous international rescue effort in the Philippines?

Instead, officials in Beijing find themselves evading awkward questions about their miserliness. Perhaps trying to save a smidgen of face, Beijing first upped its offering to $200,000 through the Red Cross. That was still less than half of the $450,000 the Philippines gave China after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. Even now, China’s total offer is far less than the $4.88 million donated to Pakistan after an earthquake there two months ago.

China’s normally quiescent state-run media worried about the fallout. “China’s international image is of vital importance to its interests,” the usually gung-ho Global Times said in an editorial Tuesday. “If it snubs Manila this time, China will suffer great losses.”

Soft Power

One reason China’s efforts to develop its soft power have failed is the utilitarian way Beijing approaches the rest of the world. Instead of using culture, adept diplomacy and trashy movies to seduce other countries, China hands out cold, hard cash. All the investment poured into railways in Indonesia, tunnels in Brazil, power grids in Cambodia, hydroelectric projects in Laos, bridges in Vietnam, roads in Zambia, factories in Malaysia, airports in Myanmar, and mining rigs in Uzbekistan comes with a high cost. In return, China demands complete docility. That’s the message being sent to the Philippines now.

Arvind Subramanian, author of the 2011 book “Eclipse: Living in the Shadow of China’s Economic Dominance,” says China is going to be a “peculiar kind of superpower,” one whose attraction is more materialistic than heartfelt. “It won’t have the soft power the U.S. has -- people wanting to come, people wanting to live, people wanting to emulate it,” he told me in Hong Kong last week. “That soft power is lacking, but it will not impede China.”

I’m not so sure. If I were Aquino, I’d tell China to keep its money; maybe Xi could use it to hire a public-relations firm. As badly as the Philippines needs the help, so does China’s image.

Cheapskate China Wins No Friends in Philippines - Bloomberg
 
That is silly to add on the stake which is uncalled for when we are also victims of the typhoon.

Let these pathetic people who are trying to orchestrate this "disaster" into a perfect opera break their banks for donation.

Meantime, I hope the suffering Pinoys can get adequate and timely reliefs from the opera actors
 
Who cares about that Amerifag Stephen Colbert sh*t. Typical f*cktard.

Anyway, Aquino regime are whores to Uncle Sam.
 
What's "imperial" about it? I noticed you love that word.

If you want help at least be grateful when others offer you help. If you want friendship then be sincere. Unfortunately, you are just like Aquino 3, which is neither.

Just a weak man with a fake smile, out there to get camera time :D

Lets see steal and smuggling resources polluting other countries with fake and cheap goods killing local industries and building bases and military outpost on almost every island that obviously does not belong to your imperial country and of course the racism and arrogance typical of the every anti filipino chinamen here
 
Ha let the chinese choke on their money we have a lot allies who never wait for permission or returns they did because it was the right thing to do nothing more so salamat po (thank you) to all our allies and International community for your sincerity and aid and let the anti filipinos choke on their tail pipes not for donating but continue the normal trash talking all over the global net kicking a down people does not make you better than them you just make yourself look worse.
 
Ha let the chinese choke on their money we have a lot allies who never wait for permission or returns they did because it was the right thing to do nothing more so salamat po (thank you) to all our allies and International community for your sincerity and aid and let the anti filipinos choke on their tail pipes not for donating but continue the normal trash talking all over the global net kicking a down people does not make you better than them you just make yourself look worse.
So did you tell your Filipino Govt to reject our offer yet? We are waiting for a rejection, here.
 
Such a measly sum makes it look, as if China is mocking the catastrophe in Philippines.
 
Why are people trying to show off on how much they can donate. My nation isn't a place to out-donate one another.

Grow the f*ck up.
 
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