China News  
SINO DAILY
China's 'men only' job culture slammed in new report
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) April 23, 2018

China arrests alleged associates of runaway tycoon
Beijing (AFP) April 23, 2018 - Chinese police on Monday announced the arrest of twin brothers alleged to have forged government documents on behalf of a billionaire fugitive who has made explosive corruption accusations against his country's politicians.

Guo Wengui, a real estate tycoon who fled to the United States, spent last year waging a one-man guerrilla war against China's elite by posting a series of graft allegations on social media.

In December Guo told AFP he was working for regime change in Beijing. China has declared him a fugitive and had Interpol issue a "red notice" or a non-binding arrest warrant for him, reportedly related to bribery charges.

Guo has applied for political asylum in the US.

Police in the southwestern city of Chongqing held a press conference on Monday to make public the latest allegations against him. In an unusual move in criminal matters, China's State Council press office invited foreign reporters to attend ahead of time.

The press conference by Chongqing's Public Security Bureau also aired video confessions from the two brothers, Chen Zhiyu and Chen Zhiheng, who were allegedly paid by Guo to forge the "secret government documents".

Critics say China's police often use torture to force confessions from suspects.

Earlier this month human rights group Safeguard Defenders released a report detailing how police have forced many high-profile defendants to make confessions with promises the videos would not be broadcast -- only to later broadcast them via state TV.

The twins' confession videos were subsequently aired later Monday by China's state broadcaster CCTV.

Officials in Chongqing told the press conference the forged documents were "distributed abroad, misleading the public, and creating an evil impact", according to the Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily.

Guo did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment on the latest claims made against him by Beijing. In the past he has disputed the allegations and said they are payback for exposing corruption.

The documents which China claims Guo helped forge and publicise include a purported secret Communist Party Central Committee document, showing China was covertly offering missiles and aid to North Korea even as it publicly approved UN sanctions against its longtime ally over its nuclear programme.

The document was published by The Washington Free Beacon, the People's Daily said. At the time, Beijing denounced the document as "fake news".

Chinese authorities said they would also share more information on Guo, and his donations to US politicians and former government officials, with US law enforcement authorities.

"We believe US authorities won't allow this type of criminal activity to exist," police were quoted by the People's Daily as saying.

Leading Chinese firms including e-commerce giant Alibaba were heavily criticised Monday for gender discrimination in job adverts in a new report which said the landscape for the female workforce in China was deteriorating.

The report by campaign group Human Rights Watch, entitled "Only Men Need Apply: Gender Discrimination in Job Advertisements in China", details a host of offences by private companies and public bodies, from issuing "men only" job ads to requests for women applicants to be "trim" and "aesthetically pleasing".

The adverts reflect "traditional and deeply discriminatory views" that women are less capable than men and that they will not be committed to their jobs because of their role as family caregivers, it said.

According to the report, discrimination in hiring practices is contributing to a drop in the female workforce and a widening gender pay gap.

Although such discrimination is illegal in China, rules are unclear and rarely enforced, it added.

Tech behemoths Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu had all published job ads that openly stated a preference for male applicants, the report said.

Alibaba was also accused of repeatedly using the lure of attractive female co-workers in its recruitment campaigns, describing them as "Ali beauties" and "goddesses" on social media.

Tencent, Baidu and leading telecom firm Huawei were also among the major companies that advertised the beauty of their female employees.

Speaking at the launch of the report in Hong Kong, Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth said CEOs must take the lead.

"If you have an anti-discrimination provision in your annual report and feel like you've done your job, you're failing miserably. What's needed is serious implementation," he said.

- Company contrition -

Tencent issued an apology after the report's publication, saying the company is investigating the incidents and seeking to make "immediate changes".

"We are sorry they occurred and we will take swift action to ensure they do not happen again," a Tencent spokesperson told AFP.

Alibaba said in a statement it would "conduct stricter reviews" of recruitment ads to ensure they complied with its policy of equality.

An Alibaba staffer told AFP the HRW report referred to "outdated" adverts from 2012 to 2015 and that the company immediately takes down adverts that violate internal regulations against discrimination.

Baidu said the job ads in question had been removed before the release of the report and that it regretted any adverts that did not reflect its values.

"These job postings... were isolated instances that in no way reflect our company's dedication to workplace equality," a Baidu spokesperson told AFP.

Huawei did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment.

Government departments were also at fault. Nearly one in five job ads for China's 2018 national civil service called for "men only" or "men preferred".

Adverts for female train conductors required them to be "trim", "fashionable" and "beautiful".

The 99-page report analysed more than 36,000 job advertisements posted between 2013 and 2018 on Chinese recruitment and company websites and on social media platforms.

Its research was restricted by the increasing pressure on women's rights activists, who have been targeted by authorities.

Some women have succeeded in taking employers to court over discriminatory job adverts, but the fines handed to firms are negligible and not a deterrent, the report said.

Although a #MeToo movement exposing sexual harassment has recently emerged in China, authorities have deleted some social media posts and closed related topic forums in an attempt to control it.


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SINO DAILY
Spain accuses CaixaBank of laundering Chinese money
Madrid (AFP) April 19, 2018
Spanish authorities announced Thursday they have pressed charges against CaixaBank, the nation's third largest lender, for breaching money laundering laws by turning a blind eye to dubious transfers by Chinese companies. The prosecutor tasked with investigating suspected money laundering by China's state-owned ICBC bank, which has a partnership with CaixaBank, said the Spanish bank suffered from "serious malfunctions in its systems to prevent money laundering." Spanish authorities wrote to Caixa ... read more

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