China slams US criticism of its policies
CHINA yesterday condemned as “slanderous” criticism US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made of Beijing’s policies in South America, saying countries there would soon see who their “true friend” was.
Pompeo on Friday, during a threeday trip to Chile, Paraguay and Peru, accused China of aiding Venezuela’s economic collapse by bankrolling President Nicolas Maduro as the country spirals into deepening political crisis.
The US is pressing Maduro to step down and urging more countries to join a coalition supporting opposition leader Juan Guaido. South America has seen a political shift in recent years towards the right, and most nations have backed Guaido.
Pompeo labelled China hypocritical for calling for non-intervention in Venezuela when he said China’s own “financial interventions have helped destroy the country”.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said such comments were “lies”.
“US Secretary of State Pompeo, on China-Latin America relations, is wantonly slanderous, deliberately instigating, irresponsible, and unreasonable. We strongly oppose this,” Lu said.
“For a long time, the US has regarded Latin America as its own backyard, and pressured, threatened and even toppled other countries’ political regimes,” he said, adding that countries in the region would soon understand who was their “true friend”.
The influence of the US in Latin America has been increasingly challenged by China, whose booming economy over the past two decades has driven up demand for South America’s raw materials.
China is already the top trade partner for Brazil, Latin America’s largest economy and the world’s top soya bean exporter.
The pivoting by it and other countries in the region towards Beijing for financing has alarmed Washington.
Highlighting the gains Latin American countries had made from economic and trade cooperation with the US , Pompeo warned about “predatory” lending practices and “malign or nefarious” actions, mirroring criticism previous US officials have made about China.