Fox host, Chinese state TV anchor face
off over trade war
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[May 30, 2019]
By Tony Munroe and Huizhong Wu
BEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese state TV
anchor and a host from Fox Business, whose sparring over the U.S.-China
trade war has been avidly followed on Chinese social media, brought
their duel to the American cable network for what turned out to be a
respectful encounter.
The showdown between Liu Xin of state-run English channel CGTN and Fox
Business Network host Trish Regan was aired on Wednesday evening in the
United States but was not shown live on TV in China, though it had been
hyped by state and social media.
Many people in China followed the debate on state broadcaster CCTV's
blog and some watched via livestream, while others on social media were
clamoring for the full video.
The rhetoric out of Beijing has become more strident since Washington
moved this month to raise tariffs on Chinese imports and blacklist tech
giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd.
The 16-minute segment began with Liu correcting Regan to say that she
was not a member of the Chinese Communist Party and was speaking for
herself as a CGTN journalist. Otherwise, there was little in the way of
fireworks.
Liu agreed that intellectual property theft was a problem, although not
only in China, and that there was a "consensus" in China that "without
the protection of IP rights, nobody, no country, no individual, can be
strong and can develop itself."
Regan asked Liu to define state capitalism, and Liu described China's
system of "socialism with Chinese characteristics, where market forces
are expected to play the dominating or the deciding role in the
allocation of resources."
Liu said state-owned enterprises play "an important but increasingly
smaller role, maybe, in the economy", adding that the private sector
accounted for 80% of Chinese employment.
Washington argues that Huawei, the world's largest maker of telecoms
network gear, is linked to the government and therefore poses a security
risk, which Huawei disputes, arguing that it is owned by employees.
Key Chinese industries such as energy, telecoms and banking are
dominated by state controlled firms, and foreign players are excluded
from some sectors, or forced to form joint ventures.
INTERRUPTIONS
Liu had said on Twitter that because of broadcasting rights issues, CGTN
would not be able to show the debate live, though it would "report on it
closely".
A Fox News spokesperson said a free live stream of the debate would be
available on the Fox Business Network website and the entire segment
would be available after the broadcast.
The internet in China is heavily censored and many major foreign media
sites are blocked.
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Flags of U.S. and China are displayed at American International
Chamber of Commerce (AICC)'s booth during China International Fair
for Trade in Services in Beijing, China, May 28, 2019. REUTERS/Jason
Lee/File Photo
Liu was connected by video link to the Fox studio from Beijing and
delays, which Regan had warned about, meant the two sometimes talked
over each other.
Chinese internet users generally thought Liu performed well, but the
top hashtag on the Twitter-like service Weibo, garnering more than
130 million views, was "CGTN host Liu Xin has been interrupted by
Trish Regan three times."
Some were annoyed they could not watch it live.
"Before the debate, everyone was noisily promoting it any which way.
Yet, the livestream wasn't a real livestream, it became a live
blog," said user Wangyuanwai, who had been unable to watch the
debate live.
The feud between Liu and Regan had started on air and was amplified
on Twitter and taken up by Chinese social media.
Liu had been critical of Regan's China coverage, leading Regan to
call on Liu to have an honest debate.
"She's so sure of U.S. victimhood, so indignant that her eyes
practically spit fire, yet in carefully analyzing her words, it's
all emotion and accusation, supported with little substance," Liu
said of Regan on CGTN.
Regan responded this week on air and on Twitter: "They're launching
a full-scale information war against the United States of America,
and their latest target is me."
CCTV and the People's Daily newspaper had shared news of the debate
on Weibo, while other Chinese media outlets had joined in, some even
circulating footage of Liu in an English speech competition from 23
years ago.
Chinese state media has opened the floodgates to patriotic
commentaries since the latest U.S. tariff hike and there has been a
surge in internet chatter about the trade war during the past few
weeks.
(Reporting by Tony Munroe, Michael Martina and Huizhong Wu; Editing
by Simon Cameron-Moore and Darren Schuettler)
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