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TRADE WARS
Chinese-Indonesians celebrate once-forbidden roots
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Jan 21, 2012

Chinese firms invest $184 mln in Taiwan in 3 years
Taipei (AFP) Jan 21, 2012 - Taiwan's government said Saturday that Chinese firms had invested around $184 million on the island since it relaxed rules on mainland investment in mid-2009 amid warming relations.

A total of 204 Chinese companies have set up subsidiaries on the island or invested in local firms in less than three years in a sign of closer trade ties, said the Mainland Affairs Council.

Chinese investors are permitted to buy into nearly 250 categories in the island's manufacturing, service and infrastructure sectors, according to the council, Taiwan's top China policy-making body.

"The government will continue to attract more mainland investors to Taiwan to promote balanced development in bilateral trade," it said in a statement.

Taiwanese companies have for years invested huge sums in China. Last year, the island's authorities approved 575 China-bound investment cases totalling $13.1 billion.

Ties with China have improved markedly since Beijing-friendly Ma Ying-jeou became Taiwan's president in 2008. He was re-elected last week for a second four-year term.

Officially, Beijing still views Taiwan as part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary. The two sides have been governed separately since they split after a civil war in 1949.


A troupe of lion dancers jerk and sway down a busy Jakarta street to usher in the Chinese New Year, moving to the beat of traditional instruments and handing out red envelopes inscribed with good wishes in Chinese characters.

Such a scene would be unthinkable just over a decade ago, when former dictator Suharto ruled Indonesia with an iron hand and disallowed any expression of the Chinese minority's own heritage.

"If you opened a shop with Chinese characters on it, it'd be closed down," said Adrian Yap, 25.

In 1967, two years after a failed coup by the Indonesian Communist Party, Suharto cracked down on Chinese art, music, literature, language and other cultural expressions.

But since the dictator was ousted in 1998, these have flowered again in the world's most populous Muslim nation, where the mostly non-Islamic Chinese minority makes up only a small fraction of its 240 million inhabitants.

In 2003, the Lunar New Year was declared a national holiday and this year -- as the nation marks the 10th year of unrestricted celebrations -- nearly all of Jakarta's glitzy malls are festooned for the occasion.

Red-and-gold banners with Chinese characters decorate many shopping centres, and Lunar New Year parades are scheduled around the city.

Workers at Jakarta's upscale Plaza Indonesia mall greet shoppers in traditional Chinese clothes as Chinese music wafts from the speakers.

Across the city, passersby are greeted by colourful banners wishing them a happy "Imlek," as the locals call the holiday.

"When I was growing up the celebrations were all hush-hush, said Jevelin Wendiady, a 24-year-old university teacher.

"Everybody knew that during Imlek you would visit relatives at home. But you wouldn't go out to malls like you do now. You'd have no idea it was Imlek, it was like any other day," she said.

"Today when you walk around there is atmosphere, decorations, music. Outside, there are even fireworks at night."

The festive season is not only embraced by Chinese-Indonesians but also by retailers, who look forward to more business.

In the run up to the Lunar New Year newspapers have been filled with hotel and restaurant adverts, offering special new year's packages and deals.

"Every store usually comes up with different schemes, just like during Christmas and Eid al-Fitr holidays," said Fetty Kwartati, spokesperson for Mitra Adi Perkasa, the company that operates such stores as Debenhams, Seibu and SOGO.

"Every festive season, including the Chinese New Year, we boost retail sales," Kwartati said. "But the volumes are not as high as during Eid-al-Fitr," she added.

-- Rediscovering Roots --

For Mandarin teacher Fifi Effendi the newfound acceptance of Chinese culture has made it easier for young Chinese-Indonesians to rediscover their roots.

"I had to go to China to learn Mandarin in 1997 when I was in my 30s. I had seen how (badly) Chinese were treated here and I was searching for my identity," the 47-year-old said.

Now, young Chinese-Indonesians have much easier access to their own culture. Mandarin classes and even lessons for traditional Chinese musical instruments are offered as electives at some schools.

"When I started teaching Mandarin in 2000, no one taught it and no one knew how to teach it," she said. "Now, everyone is able to open Mandarin-language centres and the language is in hot demand."

Student Meliani Xu, 21, decided to go to Shanghai to pursue her mother tongue and immerse herself in her lost heritage.

"My parents felt very strongly about Chinese culture," she said, adding that she and her siblings "want to preserve our culture for our children as well."

Xu said she was not alone.

"I met so many Indonesians over there (in China), so it's definitely a growing trend."

Yap said that while he grew up understanding a Chinese dialect he is thankful for the public Chinese New Year celebrations, because it is the only time he feels "Chinese."

Fifi Effendi said that non-Chinese have been so impressed by displays of Chinese culture that they now want to emulate it.

"They're attracted to Chinese culture, they say we work hard. They want to know our culture and our language now.

"It makes me happy... We're now part of Indonesia."

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Seoul awaits Chinese bonanza for Lunar New Year
Seoul (AFP) Jan 21, 2012 - South Korean businesses are sprucing up to receive Chinese tourists during the Lunar New Year holidays, hoping the free-spending visitors bring a welcome boon to their otherwise slow business.

Shops, hotels and restaurants in downtown Seoul put up new signs and banners inscribed with New Year greetings in Chinese, rearranged displays and hired Chinese speaking interpreters.

"Sales to Chinese tourists tripled in the past two years. This contributed greatly to the increase in our overall sales," a spokesman for Lotte Duty Free shop in the busy Myeongdong commercial district said Saturday on YTN TV.

Lotte Duty Free reported 2011 sales of 1.02 trillion won ($895 million), up 23 percent from the previous year, as a surge in Chinese customers was more than enough to make up for a fall in sales to South Koreans.

"I bought some Korean cosmetic products, a rice cooker and some other home appliances," one Chinese tourist said, adding she spent some $3,500 at the duty free shop alone.

A shopkeeper selling bags at Seoul's famous South Gate open-air market said the free-spending Chinese were his best customers.

"Chinese tourists are big spenders. Some snap up 10 bags at a time," the 56-year-old man, identified only as Mr. Lee, told the Chosun Ilbo daily.

A manager at a Myeongdong clothes shop said he had changed layouts to suit to Chinese tastes and put up a sign saying "Chinese translation available."

"Some of them buy a whole bunch of clothes worth a million or two million won at one go," he told the daily.

Chinese are also visiting Seoul clinics for plastic surgery during the holidays.

"We usually have six to seven Chinese patients a month, but we have the same number of Chinese during the week of Lunar New Year holidays," a clinic official told the Chosun.

Seoul's embassy in China said 1.54 million Chinese had visited South Korea in the first nine months to September last year, making South Korea the main destination for Chinese tourists, excluding Hong Kong and Macau.

Until 2010, Japan was the favourite with Chinese tourists before it was hit by a devastating tsunami and subsequent nuclear disaster in 2011, according to the embassy.



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