Welcome to The Diplomat‘s weekly quiz.
Each week, we will curate a list of 10 questions on recent events in the Asia-Pacific region (with occasional historical questions thrown in for variety).
These questions will cover all the topics we cover here at The Diplomat, including the politics, economics, security, culture, and history of the vast Asia-Pacific region.
Rest assured, the answers to each question come straight from our pages. Usually, the answer to any given quiz question will be found in a recent article we’ve run. So, as long as you keep up with The Diplomat, you should be on your way to an easy 100 percent score on each of these quizzes.
You’ll get to see your score and the average score across all our readers at the end of the quiz.
Well? What are you waiting for? Have a go at our quiz and find out just how well you know the Asia-Pacific this week.
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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
What is notable about the Whanganui River on New Zealand’s North Island?
Correct
The Whanganui River on New Zealand’s North Island has long been considered sacred by the Maori people of the region. Now, a settlement that has ended a historic struggle and has sparked widespread celebrations has given the river an extremely unique status.
The river, which is considered to be an ancestor by the Maori people, has been granted legal status and can now be represented in court. It will be represented by two guardians on behalf of the tribe and the crown.
“I know the initial inclination of some people will say it’s pretty strange to give a natural resource a legal personality,” said New Zealand’s Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson.
“But it’s no stranger than family trusts, or companies or incorporated societies.”
Incorrect
The Whanganui River on New Zealand’s North Island has long been considered sacred by the Maori people of the region. Now, a settlement that has ended a historic struggle and has sparked widespread celebrations has given the river an extremely unique status.
The river, which is considered to be an ancestor by the Maori people, has been granted legal status and can now be represented in court. It will be represented by two guardians on behalf of the tribe and the crown.
“I know the initial inclination of some people will say it’s pretty strange to give a natural resource a legal personality,” said New Zealand’s Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson.
“But it’s no stranger than family trusts, or companies or incorporated societies.”
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
What is a hukou in modern China?
Correct
In China’s larger cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, and Suzhou, city governments have implemented housing restrictions based on the hukou, a form of household registration. The hukou system has existed in some form for thousands of years in China. In the past, it was mostly used to keep track of patriarchal family records. But when the Communist Party came to power in the 1950s, the system became a convenient way to restrict movement and control the population.
Hukous limit housing and sometimes social benefits to those who are registered to live in a certain area. For example, the official registered population of Suzhou in Jiangsu province is approximately 6.5 million, with an approximately equal amount of migrant workers. Neighboring Shanghai is officially home to 13 million, with an additional 11 million migrant workers. These migrant workers are not automatically granted a hukou, which means these people, along with their children, are not entitled to the same privileges as their native Suzhou or Shanghai counterparts. They are often restricted as to where they can live and where their children can study, making them effectively second-class citizens.
And now migrant workers will also be restricted as to where they can be buried. Suzhou has become the country’s first city to ban the purchase of local grave sites by people without local hukou, according to Suzhou Daily.
Incorrect
In China’s larger cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, and Suzhou, city governments have implemented housing restrictions based on the hukou, a form of household registration. The hukou system has existed in some form for thousands of years in China. In the past, it was mostly used to keep track of patriarchal family records. But when the Communist Party came to power in the 1950s, the system became a convenient way to restrict movement and control the population.
Hukous limit housing and sometimes social benefits to those who are registered to live in a certain area. For example, the official registered population of Suzhou in Jiangsu province is approximately 6.5 million, with an approximately equal amount of migrant workers. Neighboring Shanghai is officially home to 13 million, with an additional 11 million migrant workers. These migrant workers are not automatically granted a hukou, which means these people, along with their children, are not entitled to the same privileges as their native Suzhou or Shanghai counterparts. They are often restricted as to where they can live and where their children can study, making them effectively second-class citizens.
And now migrant workers will also be restricted as to where they can be buried. Suzhou has become the country’s first city to ban the purchase of local grave sites by people without local hukou, according to Suzhou Daily.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
Which country will dispatch a helicopter carrier to join an exercise with the U.S., Japanese, and British navies in the Western Pacific later this year?
Correct
France will send one its Mistral-class amphibious assault ships to the Western Pacific later this year for military drills with the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force, the United Kingdom’s Royal Navy, and the U.S. Navy.
According to a source who spoke to Reuters about the drills, the “amphibious exercise will send a clear message to China.”
Incorrect
France will send one its Mistral-class amphibious assault ships to the Western Pacific later this year for military drills with the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force, the United Kingdom’s Royal Navy, and the U.S. Navy.
According to a source who spoke to Reuters about the drills, the “amphibious exercise will send a clear message to China.”
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
What is the significance of North Korea’s Mayang-do naval base?
Correct
North Korea’s submarine force is one of the more capable wings of its generally decrepit military. The current force’s strength lies mostly in its numbers — North Korea possesses roughly 70 submarines in all, roughly 40 of which are its newest Shark-class vessels. (Though still dangerous to its adversaries, even the Shark-class reflects pretty dated technology.) With that number, the DPRK can and does crowd its coasts with torpedo-armed or mine-laying submarines, establishing a respectable anti-surface capability near its waters. Though most of its submarine force is old, loud, or both, still North Korea tinkers on, boldly determined to achieve a reliable sea-based nuclear deterrent.
To this effect, the DPRK is building the new Gorae-class submarine (or Sinpo-class) and testing Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) accordingly. Remarkably, most of this activity and materiel are headquartered within a few kilometers of each other in the city of Sinpo and the nearby Mayang-Do Naval Base. Shipyards for the new Gorae-class, SLBM research and development facilities, many or most of the DPRK’s east coast submarines, and the only known ground-based launch platforms for SLBM tests — all are located along the same 35 square kilometer stretch of the North Korean coast. A well-coordinated first strike on this facility would hamstring the North’s submarine fleet, its submarine building capacity, and its hopes of a credible naval nuclear deterrent all in one go.
Incorrect
North Korea’s submarine force is one of the more capable wings of its generally decrepit military. The current force’s strength lies mostly in its numbers — North Korea possesses roughly 70 submarines in all, roughly 40 of which are its newest Shark-class vessels. (Though still dangerous to its adversaries, even the Shark-class reflects pretty dated technology.) With that number, the DPRK can and does crowd its coasts with torpedo-armed or mine-laying submarines, establishing a respectable anti-surface capability near its waters. Though most of its submarine force is old, loud, or both, still North Korea tinkers on, boldly determined to achieve a reliable sea-based nuclear deterrent.
To this effect, the DPRK is building the new Gorae-class submarine (or Sinpo-class) and testing Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) accordingly. Remarkably, most of this activity and materiel are headquartered within a few kilometers of each other in the city of Sinpo and the nearby Mayang-Do Naval Base. Shipyards for the new Gorae-class, SLBM research and development facilities, many or most of the DPRK’s east coast submarines, and the only known ground-based launch platforms for SLBM tests — all are located along the same 35 square kilometer stretch of the North Korean coast. A well-coordinated first strike on this facility would hamstring the North’s submarine fleet, its submarine building capacity, and its hopes of a credible naval nuclear deterrent all in one go.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
Which Asian city is expected to receive sister city status with Beijing soon?
Correct
China and Cambodia are moving to tighten their diplomatic relationship further with Beijing expected to bestow sister city status on Phnom Penh and through a separate agreement struck with Shaanxi Province designed to bolster trade and tourism.
Neither deal is earth-shattering. But they do underline the strategic importance China has attached to its much smaller neighbor, which is currently being gripped by anxiety amid fears in some areas of the economy as well as in politics as elections approach.
Incorrect
China and Cambodia are moving to tighten their diplomatic relationship further with Beijing expected to bestow sister city status on Phnom Penh and through a separate agreement struck with Shaanxi Province designed to bolster trade and tourism.
Neither deal is earth-shattering. But they do underline the strategic importance China has attached to its much smaller neighbor, which is currently being gripped by anxiety amid fears in some areas of the economy as well as in politics as elections approach.
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
Which world leader will Trump meet at Mar-a-Lago in the first week of April?
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Who is Candace Marie Claiborne?
Correct
A U.S. Department of State employee is facing charges for allegedly lying to U.S. investigators regarding her contacts over several years with Chinese intelligence agents. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Candace Marie Claiborne, 60, of Washington, D.C., allegedly maintained “extensive” contacts with Chinese agents without proper disclose and lied to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Her contacts were uncovered as part of an FBI counterintelligence probe.
According to a release from the Department of Justice citing Acting U.S. Assistant Attorney General Mary B. McCord, Claiborne “used her position and her access to sensitive diplomatic data for personal profit.” At the time of her arrest earlier this week, Claiborne was an office management specialist at the Office of Caucasus Affairs and Regional Conflicts at the State Department.
Incorrect
A U.S. Department of State employee is facing charges for allegedly lying to U.S. investigators regarding her contacts over several years with Chinese intelligence agents. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Candace Marie Claiborne, 60, of Washington, D.C., allegedly maintained “extensive” contacts with Chinese agents without proper disclose and lied to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Her contacts were uncovered as part of an FBI counterintelligence probe.
According to a release from the Department of Justice citing Acting U.S. Assistant Attorney General Mary B. McCord, Claiborne “used her position and her access to sensitive diplomatic data for personal profit.” At the time of her arrest earlier this week, Claiborne was an office management specialist at the Office of Caucasus Affairs and Regional Conflicts at the State Department.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
Which countries did Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visit in late-March?
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
What kind of missile test did North Korea carry out in early March?
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
Per the latest United Nations Human Development Report, which Central Asian state has the highest human development index score?
Correct
In numerous international metrics systems, the states of Central Asia often trend together toward the lower rungs of the rankings. Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, for instance, sees all five Central Asian states come in among the bottom third globally. Reporters Without Borders’ Press Freedom Index, meanwhile, sees only Kyrgyzstan land within the top 100 nations, and only North Korea and Eritrea scoring worse than Turkmenistan.
As such, for those looking for some silver linings from the region, last week’s release of the UN’s Human Development Report, ranking jurisdictions by Human Development Index (HDI), was a welcome round of (relatively) good news for Central Asia. Melding a HDI score from a handful of metrics — average life expectancy, mean years of schooling, etc. — the latest report, which looks at data from 2015, places Central Asian developments in a far less deleterious light than rankings elsewhere.
Leading the Central Asian contingent in the rankings, unsurprisingly, is Kazakhstan. For the second year in a row, the UN has tabbed Kazakhstan as a country with a High Human Development, with the country coming in at 56th, tying with EU-member Bulgaria and landing just ahead of the Bahamas and Malaysia.
Incorrect
In numerous international metrics systems, the states of Central Asia often trend together toward the lower rungs of the rankings. Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, for instance, sees all five Central Asian states come in among the bottom third globally. Reporters Without Borders’ Press Freedom Index, meanwhile, sees only Kyrgyzstan land within the top 100 nations, and only North Korea and Eritrea scoring worse than Turkmenistan.
As such, for those looking for some silver linings from the region, last week’s release of the UN’s Human Development Report, ranking jurisdictions by Human Development Index (HDI), was a welcome round of (relatively) good news for Central Asia. Melding a HDI score from a handful of metrics — average life expectancy, mean years of schooling, etc. — the latest report, which looks at data from 2015, places Central Asian developments in a far less deleterious light than rankings elsewhere.
Leading the Central Asian contingent in the rankings, unsurprisingly, is Kazakhstan. For the second year in a row, the UN has tabbed Kazakhstan as a country with a High Human Development, with the country coming in at 56th, tying with EU-member Bulgaria and landing just ahead of the Bahamas and Malaysia.