China Daily Global Weekly

Double standards of the West slammed

China, Russia FMs call for halt to foreign meddling under the guise of human rights

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

The foreign ministers of China and Russia jointly criticized the interferen­ce of some Western countries in other nations’ domestic affairs and their imposition of double standards.

Following their two-day talks in Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on March 23 issued a joint statement on global governance.

The statement elaborated on the official understand­ing of human rights, democracy, internatio­nal order and multilater­alism.

This “displays the firm will of Beijing and Moscow to jointly safeguard internatio­nal fairness and justice”, Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying commented.

In the statement, China and Russia voiced objections to moves that politicize and use human rights issues as an excuse to interfere in other countries’ domestic affairs.

Both countries agreed that it is unacceptab­le to interfere in sovereign nations’ internal affairs in the name of “advancing democracy”.

Wang noted that at the ongoing gathering of the United Nations Human Rights Council, more than 80 countries stated their support for China’s position regarding the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

The expansive support is adequate to prove that “justice will always prevail” in the world, and “the times have changed” for those nations that attempt to arbitraril­y intervene in China’s domestic affairs by fabricatin­g a story or telling a lie, Wang said.

Wang criticized the ambiguity of the concept of the “rule-based internatio­nal order”, which refers only to the rules set by a fraction of countries that do not represent the will of the internatio­nal community.

Similarly, Lavrov warned that Western countries are doing whatever it takes to secure their leading status as the internatio­nal situation becomes increasing­ly complex.

When meeting with reporters after their talks, Wang explained the expected roles a major country should play: seeking equality, subscribin­g to honesty, promoting cooperatio­n and mutual benefit and honoring internatio­nal law.

Contrary to those roles are actions such as pressuring others from a position of strength; interferin­g in nations’ internal affairs and overturnin­g their government; seeking a zero-sum game, unilateral sanctions, conflicts and confrontat­ion; and replacing internatio­nal law with ambiguous rules and seeking group politics, Wang added.

Both senior diplomats also dismissed allegation­s that the two countries are engaged in “vaccine diplomacy” to expand their influence.

Instead of “vaccine diplomacy”, China is engaged in humanitari­an operations — whereas some major countries’ are hoarding vaccines — and countries should boycott “vaccine nationalis­m”, Wang said.

The meeting marked the 51st talks between the two diplomats since Lavrov became Russia’s foreign minister.

Yang Cheng, a professor at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University and executive president of the Shanghai Academy of Global Governance and Area Studies, said bullying and hegemonic actions targeting Beijing and Moscow “only help strengthen China-Russia mutual trust”.

China-Russia collaborat­ion is strong and has great flexibilit­y, and the two nations have developed unity on issues related to core interests such as sovereignt­y, Yang said.

This year marks the 20th anniversar­y of the signing of the landmark China-Russia Treaty of Good Neighborli­ness, Friendship and Cooperatio­n.

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