Marin Independent Journal

China calls for probe of Bucha killings, assigns no blame

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China on Wednesday said images of civilian deaths in the Ukrainian town of Bucha are “deeply disturbing” but that no blame should be apportione­d until all facts are known.

Emerging evidence of what appeared to be widespread civilian massacres in the wake of Russian withdrawal­s from the Kyiv areas may complicate Beijing's attempts to guide public opinion over the conflict, in which China has refused to criticize Moscow.

China supports all initiative­s and measures “conducive to alleviatin­g the humanitari­an crisis” in the country, and is “ready to continue to work together with the internatio­nal community to prevent any harm to civilians,” Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian told reporters at a daily briefing.

“The truth and the cause of the incident must be verified,” Zhao said. “All parties should exercise restraint and avoid unfounded accusation­s before a conclusion of the investigat­ion is drawn.”

Zhao's remarks echo those of China's ambassador to the United Nations, Zhang Jun, who earlier called for an investigat­ion, also describing the reports and images of civilian deaths in Bucha as “deeply disturbing.”

“The relevant circumstan­ces and specific causes of the incident should be verified and establishe­d,” Zhang said in remarks to the Security Council on Tuesday, adding that, “before the full picture is clear, all sides should exercise restraint and avoid unfounded accusation­s.”

China has called for talks while refusing to criticize Russia. It opposes economic sanctions on Moscow and blames Washington and NATO for provoking the war and fueling the conflict by sending arms to Ukraine.

The entirely ruling Communist Party-controlled media have largely stuck to a pro-Moscow narrative, including repeating Russian disinforma­tion and unfounded conspiracy theories about issues such as alleged American-Ukrainian bioweapons production.

Zhao repeated China's objections to sanctions, while accusing the U.S. of having manipulate­d the situation to “profit from the chaos and make a lot of money.”

“History and reality have proven that sanctions do not bring peace and security, but only bring loselose or multiple losses, adding to the already difficult world economy and impacting the existing world economic system,” Zhao said.

The hashtag “China expresses Bucha death incident must be thoroughly investigat­ed” was a trending topic on Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter, with nearly 30 million views and more than 500 discussion­s by afternoon Wednesday

Despite the pro-Russian stance of authoritie­s who regularly censor postings, opinions were divided between support for Moscow, demands Russia be held accountabl­e, accusation­s of untrustwor­thiness against the West and Ukraine, and calls for an impartial investigat­ion.

“This is merely a play acted out by the Americans and Ukrainian Nazis in an attempt to divert public opinion, but people of the world with eyes and hearts won't ignore the facts of the U.S. and Ukraine researchin­g bio weapons,” read one posting signed “Understand­s the Cold War Better Than America.”

The Russian Embassy in Beijing also made use of the platform to reject the accusation­s, while its Ukrainian counterpar­t drew attention to “Russian war crimes against civilians in Irpin,” another town where atrocities allegedly occurred.

Prior to the Feb. 24 war, China had dismissed talk of a Russian invasion as “fake news” and U.S. fearmonger­ing. Since then, it has claimed to be holding to an independen­t, and often contradict­ory, stance, asserting the sanctity of borders and national sovereignt­y while refusing to condemn Russian aggression or even use the words “war” and “invasion,” in apparent deference to Moscow.

 ?? LIU ZHENG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image from video, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian holds a media briefing at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs office in Beijing on Wednesday.
LIU ZHENG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image from video, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian holds a media briefing at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs office in Beijing on Wednesday.

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