CCP Alleged of Orchestrating Series of Attacks on Quitting the CCP Volunteers
On June 2, 2026, volunteers from the Global Service Center for Quitting the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) were conducting an information display outside the Shilla Duty Free Shop on South Korea’s Jeju Island to raise awareness about the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in China. According to organizers, several Chinese men allegedly rushed toward the display, tore down banners and posters, and physically assaulted elderly volunteers, including individuals in their 60s and 70s. Witnesses reported that the attackers mentioned contacting the Chinese embassy during the confrontation. South Korean police detained three suspects at the scene and launched an investigation into possible violations of laws governing public assemblies and demonstrations.
The Quitting the CCP Center said the Jeju incident was part of a broader pattern of attacks targeting its volunteers in democratic countries. The organization cited five incidents between February and June 2026 in the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Korea, including assaults on volunteers in London, New York, and Los Angeles. Several of the victims were elderly individuals engaged in public outreach activities.
The organization also reported that its headquarters had previously received bomb threats and extortion messages. The incidents reflect efforts to intimidate critics of the CCP beyond China’s borders as examples of the CCP’s “long-arm repression.” More than 460 million people have submitted declarations renouncing membership in the CCP and its affiliated organizations through the “Tuidang” (Quit the CCP) movement, with approximately 50,000 new declarations submitted each day.
Source: Global Service Center for Quitting the Chinese Communist Party, June 7, 2026
https://www.tuidang.org/2026/06/07/704844/
Taiwan Launches Intelligence Reporting Portal to Gather Information from Chinese Citizens
Taiwan’s National Security Bureau (NSB) announced the launch of a new online contact portal that allows Chinese citizens to voluntarily provide information on political, military, economic, and social developments in China. The NSB said the initiative was established under Taiwan’s National Intelligence Work Act and was modeled in part on public outreach and reporting mechanisms used by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and intelligence agencies in countries such as the United Kingdom and Israel.
To reduce the risk of surveillance, the NSB recommends a series of security measures for prospective contacts, including the use of non-Chinese mobile devices, factory-reset devices, Wi-Fi networks that do not require real-name registration, VPN services, Western-developed web browsers, and private browsing modes. The agency said all submitted information will undergo technical screening, verification, and evaluation by specialized teams before any follow-up contact is initiated.
Alongside the portal, the NSB released a one-minute AI-generated promotional video titled “Change,” depicting an atmosphere of uncertainty among Chinese officials under China’s political system and encouraging people both inside and outside China to share information and “be the change.”
Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), June 14, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/aipl/202606140032.aspx
Honduras Reassesses China Ties and Whether to Reesablish Diplomatic Relationship with Taiwan
Honduras severed diplomatic relations with Taiwan in 2023 and established ties with China in hopes of securing greater economic support and financing. However, officials, business groups, and local media have increasingly criticized the results, arguing that Beijing has not fully delivered on its promises while Chinese imports and businesses have intensified competition for local industries.
The shrimp industry has been particularly affected. Producers have reported declining Chinese purchases and significant job losses, while complaints have also emerged over the impact of low-cost Chinese goods on domestic businesses. In response, the Honduran Congress has called for greater scrutiny of Chinese-owned enterprises, including reviews of their compliance with tax, customs, commercial, and immigration regulations.
Official records also show that Honduras still owes Taiwan approximately US$422.5 million in debt incurred before the diplomatic switch.
Along with the growing dissatisfaction with economic ties to China, discussion of restoring relations with Taiwan has resurfaced. President Nasry Asfura, who previously indicated during his election campaign that he would consider restoring relations with Taiwan, has stated to review agreements signed with China by the previous administration. Taiwan has indicated it remains open to future dialogue with Honduras.
Source: Radio France International, June 12, 2026
https://www.rfi.fr/cn/港澳台/20260612-洪都拉斯议会宣布全面监管与中国相关企业检讨与中关系-台洪复交声音再起
Report: China’s Flexible Employment Workforce Expected to Reach 320 Million, or 44 Percent of the Workforce, in 2026
China uses the term “flexible employment” (灵活就业) to describe work arrangements outside traditional full-time, long-term employment relationships. The category includes gig-economy workers, freelancers, self-employed individuals, platform-based workers, part-time employees, food-delivery riders, ride-hailing drivers, livestream hosts, and others who earn income without standard labor contracts. Chinese authorities generally classify these workers as employed, even though many of these jobs offer limited job security, unstable income, and reduced access to social insurance and employment benefits compared with conventional employment.
A recent report released by the China New Employment Forms Research Center, jointly established by Capital University of Economics and Business and the China Association for Employment Promotion, found that China’s flexible employment workforce has expanded rapidly in recent years. Based on big-data monitoring, surveys, and field research, the report estimates that the number of flexible workers increased from more than 200 million in 2021 to 240 million in 2024 and 280 million in 2025. It projects that the figure will reach 320 million in 2026, accounting for approximately 44 percent of China’s total workforce of 725 million people.
Researchers noted that the continued expansion of flexible employment will have significant implications for labor rights protection, social security systems, and the overall structure of China’s labor market. By comparison, China’s blue-collar workforce grew only marginally, rising from 425 million in 2024 to 427 million in 2025.
Source: Lianhe Zaobao, June 7, 2026
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/news/china/story20260607-9169767
China Pushes Cross-Strait Integration at Fujian Forum Amid Taiwan’s Wariness
A forum aimed at expanding exchanges between mainland China and Taiwan opened in China’s Fujian Province on June 13. A senior member of the Chinese Communist Party’s top leadership voiced hope that economic and other exchanges would help advance cross-strait integration, prompting heightened vigilance from Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) administration.
Participants in the forum included senior figures from Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), as well as representatives from the business community.
Beijing regards Taiwan’s DPP administration and similar actors as “Taiwan independence forces.” According to Chinese state media, Wang Huning, the fourth-ranked member of the CCP’s Politburo Standing Committee, told the forum that China must “firmly advance the great cause of national reunification” and “resolutely oppose ‘Taiwan independence’ separatism and outside interference.”
Wang also said Beijing welcomes Taiwanese people and businesses to take part in cross-strait exchange and cooperation and to participate in the mainland’s high-quality development.
In response to the forum, Taiwan’s DPP administration called on the public and various groups in Taiwan not to echo the Chinese Communist Party’s narrative and not to convey misleading messages to the international community.
Source: NHK, June 14, 2026
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/zh/news/na-k10015149441000/
AI Concentration Seen Deepening China’s Urban Divide
Nomura’s chief China economist Lu Ting warned that artificial intelligence development, heavily concentrated in a handful of major cities, will worsen the “K-shaped” divergence already emerging between China’s largest cities and smaller ones amid a prolonged property downturn.
Speaking at a media briefing, Lu noted that while AI is driving K-shaped economic divergence globally—benefiting capital owners and highly skilled workers while threatening many mid-to-low-end white-collar jobs—China’s situation is compounded by five years of negative growth in real estate investment, which turned negative in 2022 and has remained so since, though cities like Shanghai and Hangzhou have recently shown signs of stabilizing.
Lu explained that lower-tier cities saw steeper home price declines, hitting lower-income residents and migrant workers hardest. As major cities relaxed home purchase restrictions, wealth and talent have increasingly concentrated in top-tier cities, deepening regional divergence.
He said AI development is concentrated in cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Hangzhou, with extremely high barriers in large models and chip design and manufacturing making it unlikely smaller cities will benefit, unlike the export boom from electric vehicles, batteries, and solar panels that lifted cities such as Ningde and Changzhou. AI-driven prosperity is unlikely to spread to lower-tier cities and could instead displace white-collar jobs there.
This worsening divergence also undermines China’s push to boost domestic consumption, as wealth concentration among a small population and few cities limits demand growth.
Lu urged the government to avoid blind optimism about AI, support region-specific AI development so smaller cities can share in the benefits, strengthen the social safety net, and moderate the pace of technologies like autonomous driving that threaten blue-collar jobs.
Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), June 14, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202606140068.aspx
China’s Government Debt Surpasses 100 Trillion Yuan
According to the latest data from the People’s Bank of China, the country’s outstanding government debt reached 100.6 trillion yuan (US$14 trillion) at the end of May 2026, surpassing the 100 trillion yuan mark for the first time.
Official figures show that China’s government debt balance stood at 46.55 trillion yuan at the end of 2020 and rose to 92.6 trillion yuan by the end of 2024. The latest figure represents an increase of more than 100 percent in just over five years.
Analysts attribute the rapid growth primarily to Beijing’s efforts to counter economic slowdown through expansionary fiscal policies. In recent years, authorities have increased government borrowing to fund infrastructure, public welfare, and other major projects. At the same time, local governments have issued large volumes of bonds to replace off-balance-sheet liabilities, bringing previously hidden debt onto official balance sheets and contributing to the sharp rise in reported government debt.
Some analysts caution that the true level of government-related debt may be substantially higher, since the official figures do not fully capture all local government financing vehicles, contingent liabilities, and other off-balance-sheet obligations.
Source: Lianhe Zaobao, June 14, 2026
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/finance/china/story20260614-9204091
Japan’s Pro-Taiwan Parliamentary Group Renames Itself to Emphasize “Taiwan”
On June 11, Japan’s bipartisan parliamentary group supporting ties with Taiwan formally voted to change its name from the Japan–ROC Diet Members’ Consultative Council (Nikkan Kon) to the Japan–Taiwan Diet Members’ Consultative Council. (Note: the original name in Chinese is “日華(Japan-China)” where 華 means China and traditionally associated with the Republic of China (ROC); the new name is “日台(Japan-Taiwan).”
Group chairman and House of Representatives member Keiji Furuya said the organization had operated under its previous name for 53 years. He noted that both governments had already been using the term “Taiwan” for the past decade. In 2017, Japan renamed its official representative organization in Taiwan the “Japan–Taiwan Exchange Association,” while Taiwan renamed its counterpart the “Taiwan–Japan Relations Association.” Lawmakers had long discussed adopting a similar change. Following the inauguration of Taiwan President Ko Shi-cheng’s administration, the group concluded that the timing was appropriate to proceed with the renaming.
The organization currently has 321 members, making it one of the largest and most influential parliamentary groups promoting Japan–Taiwan relations within Japan’s National Diet (the national legislative body).
Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), June 11, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/aopl/202606110338.aspx