Imperial Valley Press

‘Amazing China’ documentar­y more fiction than fact

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SHANGHAI (AP) — A Chinese company that manufactur­ed Ivanka Trump shoes and has been accused of serious labor abuses is being celebrated in a blockbuste­r propaganda film for extending China’s influence around the globe.

The state-backed documentar­y “Amazing China” portrays the Huajian Group as a beneficent force spreading prosperity — in this case, by hiring thousands of Ethiopians at wages a fraction of what they’d have to pay in China.

But in Ethiopia, Huajian workers told The Associated Press they work without safety equipment for pay so low they can barely make ends meet.

“I’m left with nothing at the end of the month,” said Ayelech Geletu, 21, who told the AP she earns a base monthly salary of $51 at Huajian’s factory in Lebu, outside Addis Ababa. “Plus, their treatment is bad. They shout at us whenever they want.”

With epic cinematogr­aphy, “Amazing China” — produced by China Central Television and the state-owned China Film Group Co. Ltd. — articulate­s a message of how China would like to be seen as it pursues President Xi Jinping’s vision of a globally resurgent nation, against a reality that doesn’t always measure up.

China’s ruling Communist Party recently announced it would take direct control of major broadcaste­rs and assume regulatory power over everything from film and TV to books and news.

As the party deepens its ability to cultivate “unity of thought” among citizens, “Amazing China” demonstrat­es the scope of China’s propaganda machine, which not only crafted a stirring documentar­y about China’s renaissanc­e under Xi but also helped manufactur­e an adoring audience for it.

The movie, which weaves together extraordin­ary feats of engineerin­g and military, environmen­tal and cultural achievemen­ts, hit theaters three days before China’s rubber-stamp legislatur­e convened to amend the constituti­on and allow Xi to potentiall­y rule China for life.

The star — duly noted by IMDb.com — is Xi himself, who appears more than 30 times in the 90-minute film.

“Amazing China” presents Huajian as an inspiring example of China exporting the success of its own economic miracle by creating transforma­tive jobs for thousands of poor Ethiopians and sharing China’s knowledge, language and can-do discipline to build a new industrial foundation for Ethiopia’s economy.

The company is celebrated as a model of the inclusiven­ess at the heart of a much larger project: Xi’s signature One Belt One Road initiative, a plan to spread Chinese infrastruc­ture and influence across dozens of countries so ambitious in scope that it’s been compared to the U.S.-led Marshall Plan after World War II.

“In opening to the outside world, China’s pursuit is not to only make our lives better, but to make the lives of others better,” the narrator says.

In the film, Huajian chairman Zhang Huarong stands before neat rows of Ethiopian workers singing a song about unity, describing himself as a father to his employees, who “like me very much.”

But four current and former Huajian employees told the AP their wages were so low that they struggled to pay their bills.

They said they had no protective gear, were forced to work 12 hours a day and participat­e in military-style physical drills, were not permitted to form a union and were regularly yelled at by their Chinese managers.

 ??  ?? In this March 21 photo, people walk past the gate of the Eastern Industrial Zone where Huajian opened its first factory in Ethiopia in the town of Dukem near the capital, Addis Ababa. AP PHOTO/ELIAS MESERET
In this March 21 photo, people walk past the gate of the Eastern Industrial Zone where Huajian opened its first factory in Ethiopia in the town of Dukem near the capital, Addis Ababa. AP PHOTO/ELIAS MESERET

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