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在线翻译:
szdaily -> World Economy -> 
US lawmakers urge scrutiny of Chinese takeovers
    2016-10-11  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    TWO U.S. representatives from California, including the head of the House intelligence committee, have joined the group of U.S. lawmakers backing an appeal to the U.S. Government to increase scrutiny of Chinese takeovers of American companies.

    Republicans Devin Nunes and Ken Calvert added their names to a bipartisan list of 16 other legislators who asked the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) in a Sept. 15 letter to review the matter, according to Clark Fonda, deputy chief of staff for Representative Robert Pittenger, a North Carolina Republican who drafted the letter. Nunes chairs the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

    The lawmakers want the GAO to determine whether the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has kept pace with the growing number of foreign acquisitions stateside.

    The letter addressed the rise of investments from State-controlled enterprises from China and cited deals such as Dalian Wanda Group Co.’s acquisition of a controlling stake in AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., and AMC’s pending purchase of Carmike Cinemas Inc., as cause for concern. The U.S. lawmakers also cited foreign takeovers in other industries such as agriculture. The GAO said two weeks ago it would undertake the review of the CFIUS early next year. Dalian Wanda, controlled by China’s richest man Wang Jianlin, is a privately owned firm. A spokesman for Nunes confirmed the lawmaker had joined the group. A spokesman for Calvert didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

    “It’s a huge deal that the chairman of the House intelligence committee has thrown his weight behind this request because it demonstrates the intelligence community’s concern about these issues broadly, and the need for more CFIUS authorities to deal with evolving threats,” said Rick Berman, a Washington-based lobbyist who started a campaign against Chinese investment in U.S. media companies this summer.

    Wanda, which has been one of the most active Chinese acquirers of entertainment assets, has in the past few weeks also agreed to a movie marketing and financing deal with Sony Pictures for releases in China and is in talks to buy awards show producer Dick Clark Productions. It will become the United States’ biggest owner of theaters if the US$1.2 billion deal for Carmike is approved.

    “Wanda has and will continue to comply with all applicable U.S. law in connection with its media and entertainment investments in the United States including without limitation making the appropriate filings with the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice,” Wanda said in a statement.

    “Chinese censorship of U.S. media is one of several important concerns that didn’t exist when the CFIUS was created in the 1970s,” Pittenger said in a statement last week. “The GAO study will help Congress determine what additional authorities or procedures are necessary to allow the CFIUS to continue performing its essential functions in a rapidly evolving national-security landscape.”

    In a separate move, one of the representatives who signed the letter, Texas Republican John Culberson, urged the Justice Department to adopt recommendations and suggest legislation to improve enforcement of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). The 1938 statute, adopted in response to concerns about Soviet and Nazi propaganda in the United States, requires the disclosure of lobbyists for foreign agents. But the law has been weakened and the number of registrants has fallen, Culberson said in a letter.

    Culberson, a member of committees that approve funding for the Justice Department, asked Assistant Attorney General John Carlin to examine how the FARA may apply to foreign control of U.S. media companies “that may be subject to foreign propaganda, censorship and other pressures that lead to self-censorship in order to receive financing and distribution.” (SD-Agencies)

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