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Worries Grow in Singapore Over China’s Calls to Help ‘Motherland’

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Worries Grow in Singapore Over China’s Calls to Help ‘Motherland’

By Amy Qin

SINGAPORE — Growing up in Singapore, Chan Kian Kuan always took pride in his Teochew heritage — the dialect, the cultural traditions and the famous steamed fish. But after visiting his ancestral village in Teochew, in Guangdong Province, China, and seeing the progress there, he became truly proud to be not just Teochew, but also Chinese.

“It’s very messy. We are Chinese, but we are Singaporean, too,” said Mr. Chan, vice president of the Teochew Poit Ip Clan Association in Singapore. “When China becomes stronger, we feel proud. China is like the big brother.”

As a young country made up mostly of immigrants, Singapore has for decades walked a fine line between encouraging citizens like Mr. Chan to connect with their cultural heritage and promoting a Singaporean national identity.

But there are growing concerns here that a rising China could tip that carefully orchestrated balance by seeking to convert existing cultural affinities among Singaporean Chinese into loyalty to the Chinese “motherland.”

Confident in its fast-growing political and economic clout, China has become increasingly assertive in its efforts to appeal to the vast Chinese diaspora to serve the country’s national interests and gain influence abroad. Already, there has been evidence of the Chinese Communist Party’s attempts to manipulate political activity among Chinese populations in countries like Canada, the United States and Australia.

And with ethnic Chinese constituting nearly 75 percent of Singapore’s population of 5.6 million, some scholars and former diplomats worry that this island nation could be an especially tantalizing target for the Chinese government’s influence efforts.

“For us, it is an existential issue; the stakes are extremely high,” said Bilahari Kausikan, a former permanent secretary of Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and one of the most outspoken voices in the country on the subject of Chinese interference.

“China’s rise is a geopolitical fact that everyone must accept,” Mr. Kausikan said. “But it’s a very small step in my mind from cultural affinity for China to the idea of Chinese superiority. We are only 53 years old. It’s not guaranteed that every Singaporean Chinese would not be tempted either consciously or unconsciously to take that step.”

Last month China’s ambassador to Singapore took the rare step of publicly rebutting recent remarks made by Mr. Kausikan in which he raised an alarm about what he called China’s covert “influence operations.”

“We uphold the principles of peaceful coexistence and champion global fairness and justice,” the ambassador, Hong Xiaoyong, wrote in an op-edin The Straits Times, an English-language newspaper. “We oppose the big bullying the small and interference in others’ internal affairs. This is what China has said, and this is also what China has been doing.”

“China respects Singapore’s achievements in maintaining racial and religious harmony,” he added. “It has no intention of influencing Singaporeans’ sense of their national identity and will never do so.”

One example of how on-edge Singaporean officials have been came to light last year when the government expelled Huang Jing, an American academic born in China, for what it said was his covert effort to influence Singapore’s foreign policy on behalf of an unnamed foreign government — widely believed to be China. The expulsion came amid heightened tensions between Singapore and China over territorial issues relating to the South China Sea.

Mr. Kausikan and others are also concerned about China’s subtler influence efforts in Singapore, including appeals to sentimental “flesh and blood” ties to China.

In recent years, China has stepped up people-to-people exchanges between the two countries, helping to organize conferences bringing together overseas Chinese, arranging visits for Singaporean Chinese to their ancestral villages and coordinating study abroad programs and “roots-seeking camps” for young Singaporeans.

These kinds of programs are not unique to China, of course. The camps, for example, bear some similarity to Israel’s popular Birthright program. They are often arranged and paid for in part by Chinese government agencies like the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office.

In a description of one such camp held this year, participating Singaporean students were promised a full itinerary of activities including lessons in Chinese calligraphy and history. At another camp, in 2014, the schedule included learning the martial art of tai chi and singing Communist “red” songs.

In recent years, officials affiliated with the Communist Party’s United Front Work Department — a powerful Chinese agency responsible for winning hearts and minds abroad — have also visited Singapore with the aim of strengthening ties with the local Chinese.

“My cellphone is on 24 hours a day,” Hong Guoping, then head of the United Front in the Xiang’an district in Fujian Province, told a group of Singaporean Chinese affiliated with that district in 2013. “My fellow countrymen can call me at any time. I’m happy to serve everyone.”

In a sign of the growing emphasis on building diaspora ties, it was announced this year that the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office would come under the purview of the United Front Work Department.

“A more generous reading is that these are people-to-people exchanges,” said Ian Chong, an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore, “and a more skeptical reading is that it’s an effort by China to exert soft-power influence.”

Some scholars have highlighted what they call a worrying trend that has seen China increasingly blurring the distinction between huaqiao (Chinese citizens overseas) and huaren (ethnic Chinese of all nationalities).

At an overseas Chinese work conference last year, President Xi Jinping stressed the need to bring together people of Chinese descent around the world — up to 60 million ethnic Chinese in more than 180 countries — to enjoy the “Chinese dream.”

“The realization of the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation requires the joint efforts of Chinese sons and daughters at home and abroad,” said Mr. Xi, according to Xinhua, China’s state-run news agency.

Scholars say the focus on strengthening ties with overseas Chinese signals a major shift away from Beijing’s previous, more hands-off approach to diaspora relations.

“There is a sense that the emphasis now is on how all ethnic Chinese share a similar origin and therefore should be more sympathetic to a P.R.C. perspective,” said Professor Chong, referring to the People’s Republic of China.

In some Western countries, China has already successfully mobilized local groups like Chinese businessmen, Chinese students and Chinese-language media, using them as proxies to rally against anti-Chinese views or to whip up support for Beijing’s line on contentious issues like the Dalai Lama or Taiwan.

Frequently, the result has been a negative and often xenophobic anti-Chinese backlash. Many overseas Chinese have said they are now being unfairly subject to a cloud of suspicion simply for being associated with China.

“When you start reaching out to people on the basis of race and blood, it becomes unacceptable to other governments,” said Wang Gungwu, a former chairman of the East Asian Institute at the National University of Singapore. “On the other hand, Beijing thinks it is natural to do so. And that is where the conflict lies, however unintended the consequences may be.”

As the only country outside China, Hong Kong and Taiwan to have a majority-Chinese population, Singapore is in a unique position.

Wary of being seen as a fifth column of China, the country under Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew went out of its way after gaining independence in 1965 to assert its sovereignty — making it a point to be the last country in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to establish diplomatic ties with China.

At the same time, the government sought to build a Singaporean national identity based on multiracialism, equality and meritocracy. English is the country’s official working language.

But Singapore finds itself continually needing to remind officials in Beijing that it is not a Chinese country. Last year, for example, not long after China unveiled a gleaming new center to promote Chinese culture here, Singapore countered by opening a sprawling $110 million, 11-story Singapore Chinese Cultural Center in the heart of the financial district.

The message was clear: Singaporean Chinese culture is not the same as Chinese culture.

And China’s efforts to gain influence in Singapore are by no means one way. Recognizing the economic potential after China’s opening up in the 1980s, Singapore has also gone out of its way to play up its shared Chinese heritage.

In the late 1970s, for example, the government started a language campaign to encourage young Singaporean Chinese to learn Mandarin — China’s official language — instead of their native Chinese dialects, with an eye to facilitating greater business opportunities. Every year, the country also hosts numerous performances by Chinese entertainers, particularly during the annual Chinese New Year celebrations.

Last year, Singapore was China’s top foreign investor — a status many here proudly attribute to the country’s ability to act as a gateway between China and the West.

“You could say Singaporeans are even more proactive than the Chinese” in building ties between the two countries, said Mr. Chan of the Teochow Poit Ip Clan Association.

Not everyone is convinced that China will succeed in winning the loyalty of Singaporean Chinese, which are a large and fragmented population.

Young Singaporean Chinese as well as those who studied in the country’s former English education system, for example, often have only a vague notion of China and limited Chinese-speaking abilities. Then there is the large influx of immigrants from China in recent years, which has sharpened the perceived differences between the two countries.

“Maybe some people who go back to their ancestral village and see all the progress being made might feel their heartstrings being tugged, but at the end of the day, they would never look at it and think this is home,” said Pang Cheng Lian, the editor of the book “50 Years of the Chinese Community in Singapore.”

Then again, when it comes to strengthening its influence abroad, China has proved that it is both patient and persistent.

“They are not eager to have immediate results,” said Leo Suryadinata, a visiting senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, “because Beijing’s view is always the long-term view.”


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/05/world/asia/singapore-china.html
 
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为什么我们要做新加坡华文视频? Singaporeans’ Chinese...

More and More young Sinpaporeans identify with China now, good trend.
 
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为什么我们要做新加坡华文视频? Singaporeans’ Chinese...

More and More young Sinpaporeans identify with China now, good trend.

If you're really interested in having a greater depth of understanding, here's an interactive web with a series of letters written by 2 reporters from our English and Chinese newspaper on the topic of Singaporean Chinese identity. It touches more on language, culture and identity rather than from a political perspective written by the New York Times in the OP.

The letters are published in both English and Chinese.

http://project.zaobao.com/interactive/chinese-singaporean-identity/

Bottom center of the screen for the letters.
 
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China playing the race card is nothing new. Lee warned Asia about it...

Chapter 37

Deng Xiaoping's China

The Malaysians must be suspicious of Deng. There were underlying suspicions and animosity between Malay Muslims and Chinese in Malaysia, and between Indonesians and their ethnic Chinese. Because China was exporting revolution to Southeast Asia, my Asean neighbors wanted Singapore to rally with them, not against the Soviet Union, but against China.

Asean governments regarded radio broadcasts from China appealing directly to their ethnic Chinese as dangerous subversion. Deng listened silently. He had never seen it this light: China, a big foreign power, going over the governments of the region to subvert their citizens. I said it was most unlikely that Asean countries would respond positively to his proposal for a united front against the Soviet Union and Vietnam and suggested that we discuss on how to resolve this problem. Then I paused.

Deng's expression and body language registered consternation. He knew that I had spoken the truth. Abruptly, he asked, "What do you want me to do?" I was astonished. I had never met a communist leader who was prepared to depart from his brief when confronted with reality, much less ask what I wanted him to do. I had expected him to brush my points aside as Premier Hua Guofeng had done in Beijing in 1976 when I pressed him over the inconsistency of China's supporting the Malayan Communist Party to foment revolution in Singapore, not Malaya. Hua had answered with bluster, "I do not know the details, but whenever communists fight, they will win." Not Deng. He realized that he had to face up to this problem if Vietnam was to be isolated. I hesitated to tell this seasoned, weather-beaten revolutionary what he should do, but since he had asked me, I said, "Stop such radio broadcasts; stop such appeals. It will be better for the ethnic Chinese in Asean if China does not underline their kinship and call upon their ethnic sympathy. The suspicion of the indigenous peoples will always be there, whether or not China emphasizes these blood ties. But if China appeals to these blood ties so blatantly, it must increase their suspicions, China must stop radio broadcasts from south China by the Malayan and Indonesian Communist Parties.
 
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China playing the race card is nothing new. Lee warned Asia about it...

Chapter 37

Deng Xiaoping's China

The Malaysians must be suspicious of Deng. There were underlying suspicions and animosity between Malay Muslims and Chinese in Malaysia, and between Indonesians and their ethnic Chinese. Because China was exporting revolution to Southeast Asia, my Asean neighbors wanted Singapore to rally with them, not against the Soviet Union, but against China.

Asean governments regarded radio broadcasts from China appealing directly to their ethnic Chinese as dangerous subversion. Deng listened silently. He had never seen it this light: China, a big foreign power, going over the governments of the region to subvert their citizens. I said it was most unlikely that Asean countries would respond positively to his proposal for a united front against the Soviet Union and Vietnam and suggested that we discuss on how to resolve this problem. Then I paused.

Deng's expression and body language registered consternation. He knew that I had spoken the truth. Abruptly, he asked, "What do you want me to do?" I was astonished. I had never met a communist leader who was prepared to depart from his brief when confronted with reality, much less ask what I wanted him to do. I had expected him to brush my points aside as Premier Hua Guofeng had done in Beijing in 1976 when I pressed him over the inconsistency of China's supporting the Malayan Communist Party to foment revolution in Singapore, not Malaya. Hua had answered with bluster, "I do not know the details, but whenever communists fight, they will win." Not Deng. He realized that he had to face up to this problem if Vietnam was to be isolated. I hesitated to tell this seasoned, weather-beaten revolutionary what he should do, but since he had asked me, I said, "Stop such radio broadcasts; stop such appeals. It will be better for the ethnic Chinese in Asean if China does not underline their kinship and call upon their ethnic sympathy. The suspicion of the indigenous peoples will always be there, whether or not China emphasizes these blood ties. But if China appeals to these blood ties so blatantly, it must increase their suspicions, China must stop radio broadcasts from south China by the Malayan and Indonesian Communist Parties.
Bringing in old news and try paint as current reality show how out of touch in 2018.

White American used to slave black in 19th century. So can I say America now still slave black people?
 
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Not everyone is convinced that China will succeed in winning the loyalty of Singaporean Chinese, which are a large and fragmented population.
Throughout thousands of years of Chinese history, Southern Chinese had always been a fragmented group, it is nothing new. Chinese Singaporeans are an extension of Southern Chinese. To unify China, it was always done from the North to South (except for Ming but its seat of power is near the central plains and the Mongols devastated the North).

The fragmented nature of Southern Chinese was a product of geography and their origins. Southern Chinese don't all have the same origins. Some descended from migrants of various central plains dynasties (North) spanning periods of thousands of years, some mixed with various Southern tribes, and some were decedents of ancient tribes that were sinicized. This compounded by the divisive factor of Southern China's mountainous geography, created this patchwork of dialects that can be organized into 7 major dialect groups but often the same dialect group is not mutually intelligible.

Contrast this with the Northern, North East and South Western China which speaks mutually intelligible dialects part of the Mandarin group (Jin dialect is often part of Mandarin). Much of this had to do with ease of administration due to geography, strategic interests of the state, and history.
300px-Map_of_sinitic_languages_cropped-en.svg.png


Wu dialect for example can be further divided into many sub dialects. The same is true with other dialects. There are over 200 dialects spoken in China, with most concentrated in Southern China. Some places are extreme to the point where groups on opposite sides of a mountain or in neighbouring villages cannot understand each other.
main-qimg-64f674e11ce4c1d185fb0356b0a6e689.png


Vertical axis is the timeline from Zhou dynasty (1046-314 BC) to present. Mandarin includes Jin dialect and Dungan (spoken in Central Asia). Various dialect groups splintered from various periods of Chinese history.
9db5eb227c05a0aba0533fad87e0f809.png


To this day, the seat of power lies in Eastern and Northern China (corresponding with the original warring states), language is one and cultural reasons is another. For various reasons, when Eastern and Northern China was unified, the rest of China was unified with relative ease. Doing this from the deep South is very difficult, Mao knew this phenomenon and though he was from the South (Hunan) he trekked North to Ya'an during the long march to gather strength. When the civil erupted after WW2, taking Manchuria and Northern China was a priority.

What am I trying to say? Singapore being a fragmented population including within the Chinese community is nothing new. If history is a guide, things will change over the next few decades as the seat of power within the core of China gathers strength. Even if China doesn't consciously exert any influence upon Singapore, the Singaporeans will subconsciously receive it and will manifest consciously over the course of decades through their decedents. They will consciously work on developing the language skills and cultural factors because it is their competitive advantage that will help them get a head in the years to come. In the future, the Chinese Singaporeans that don't know Mandarin will be laughing stocks when even many people of other ethnicities can speak Mandarin.
 
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Bringing in old news and try paint as current reality show how out of touch in 2018.

White American used to slave black in 19th century. So can I say America now still slave black people?
No, you cannot. But what China is doing now is the same as what China tried to do during the Cold War.
 
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No, you cannot. But what China is doing now is the same as what China tried to do during the Cold War.
Lol... China during cold war is a close market and non capitalism and now you mean China is still the same?

I am asking orange and you give me a Apple? Are you desperate just to prove your point which is irrelevant.
 
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Lol... China during cold war is a close market and non capitalism and now you mean China is still the same?
Your racist tactic still the same.

So tell us, why does China NEED to appeal to racial/ethnic ties to Chinese who are citizens of other countries?
 
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In the future, the Chinese Singaporeans that don't know Mandarin will be laughing stocks when even many people of other ethnicities can speak Mandarin.

All young Singaporean Chinese can speak Mandarin but the issue here is that the general level of fluency is low, unless they are from an elite school with strong Chinese tradition for their primary and secondary education. Almost all young Singaporeans I know who can speak proper Mandarin with high competency are from these schools.

I have to point out that speaking Mandarin frequently doesn't mean you can speak proper Mandarin. Speaking Mandarin with family and friends is actually very common here but even so many of these people are at a level of basic fluency just for daily conversation. Try delving into deeper topics and they will find difficulty in expressing themselves in pure Mandarin without mixing in some English.
 
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Throughout thousands of years of Chinese history, Southern Chinese had always been a fragmented group, it is nothing new. Chinese Singaporeans are an extension of Southern Chinese. To unify China, it was always done from the North to South (except for Ming but its seat of power is near the central plains and the Mongols devastated the North).

The fragmented nature of Southern Chinese was a product of geography and their origins. Southern Chinese don't all have the same origins. Some descended from migrants of various central plains dynasties (North) spanning periods of thousands of years, some mixed with various Southern tribes, and some were decedents of ancient tribes that were sinicized. This compounded by the divisive factor of Southern China's mountainous geography, created this patchwork of dialects that can be organized into 7 major dialect groups but often the same dialect group is not mutually intelligible.

Contrast this with the Northern, North East and South Western China which speaks mutually intelligible dialects part of the Mandarin group (Jin dialect is often part of Mandarin). Much of this had to do with ease of administration due to geography, strategic interests of the state, and history.
View attachment 491023

Wu dialect for example can be further divided into many sub dialects. The same is true with other dialects. There are over 200 dialects spoken in China, with most concentrated in Southern China. Some places are extreme to the point where groups on opposite sides of a mountain or in neighbouring villages cannot understand each other.
View attachment 491022

Vertical axis is the timeline from Zhou dynasty (1046-314 BC) to present. Mandarin includes Jin dialect and Dungan (spoken in Central Asia). Various dialect groups splintered from various periods of Chinese history.
View attachment 491024

To this day, the seat of power lies in Eastern and Northern China (corresponding with the original warring states), language is one and cultural reasons is another. For various reasons, when Eastern and Northern China was unified, the rest of China was unified with relative ease. Doing this from the deep South is very difficult, Mao knew this phenomenon and though he was from the South (Hunan) he trekked North to Ya'an during the long march to gather strength. When the civil erupted after WW2, taking Manchuria and Northern China was a priority.

What am I trying to say? Singapore being a fragmented population including within the Chinese community is nothing new. If history is a guide, things will change over the next few decades as the seat of power within the core of China gathers strength. Even if China doesn't consciously exert any influence upon Singapore, the Singaporeans will subconsciously receive it and will manifest consciously over the course of decades through their decedents. They will consciously work on developing the language skills and cultural factors because it is their competitive advantage that will help them get a head in the years to come. In the future, the Chinese Singaporeans that don't know Mandarin will be laughing stocks when even many people of other ethnicities can speak Mandarin.

Singapore already seems to be positioning itself near Mainland China axis, often trying to play the role of an arbitrator for in-house disagreements such as the one between Mainland China and Taiwan.
 
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Your racist tactic still the same.

So tell us, why does China NEED to appeal to racial/ethnic ties to Chinese who are citizens of other countries?
Looks like you are running out of counter argument becos my reply is so correct that you try derail with racism?

:enjoy:
 
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Looks like you are running out of counter argument becos my reply is so correct that you try derail with racism?
Derail? Nonsense. Appeal to the 'Motherland' is an appeal to racial/ethnic ties.
 
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