Daily Nation Newspaper

CHINA DISOWNS AMBASSADOR’S REMARKS QUESTIONIN­G UKRAINIAN INDEPENDEN­CE

- - BBC

CHINA has distanced itself from the remarks of one of its envoys who questioned the sovereignt­y of Ukraine and other former Soviet countries.

Paris ambassador Lu Shaye’s comments last week caused widespread outrage, leading on calls to Beijing to clarify. On Monday, China’s foreign ministry said it respected the independen­ce of all post-Soviet republics. China is a major ally of Russia and has not condemned President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine last year. It sees itself as a major player in attempts to bring peace to Ukraine, but has become an increasing­ly important trading partner for Russia amid Western sanctions prompted by the invasion, and many in the West doubt its impartiali­ty on the issue.

In an interview for the French LCI network last week, Ambassador Lu was asked China’s view of the status of Crimea which Russia annexed in 2014. The interviewe­r argued that under internatio­nal law the region was part of Ukraine. Mr Lu responded by suggesting that the issue was not clear cut, and that countries such as Ukraine could not rely on internatio­nal law to defend their sovereignt­y. “Even these former Soviet countries don’t have an effective status under internatio­nal law because there is no internatio­nal agreement under internatio­nal law to concretise their status as sovereign countries,” he said.

President Putin has frequently challenged Ukrainian independen­ce. In a speech days before the start of Russia’s invasion last year, he denied Ukraine had any “real statehood” and said the country was an integral part of Russia’s history and culture. On Monday Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning rejected Mr Lu’s position, saying Beijing respected the sovereignt­y, independen­ce and territoria­l integrity of all countries and upheld the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter. She said that while “the Soviet Union was a federal state and had the status of an entity of internatio­nal law in its entirety in foreign affairs... this does not deny the fact that each member republic of the Soviet Union has the status of a sovereign state after the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union”. Later the Chinese embassy in Paris said in a statement quoted by AFP that Mr Lu’s remarks were a personal point of view and should not be over-interprete­d.

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