Hindustan Times (East UP)

Friendship with Russia ‘rock solid’: China

On Ukraine, foreign minister Wang Yi said China is ‘willing to work with the internatio­nal community to carry out necessary mediation, when necessary’

- AGENCIES

BEIJING: China stressed on Monday that the friendship between Beijing and Moscow was still “rock solid”, despite internatio­nal condemnati­on of Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, as Beijing said it was open to helping mediate peace.

China has refused to condemn its close ally Moscow after only last month touting a “no limits” strategic partnershi­p between the two countries.

“The friendship between the two peoples is rock solid, and both sides’ future cooperatio­n prospects are very vast,” said foreign minister Wang Yi at a press briefing during the Chinese leadership’s annual political congress in Beijing. But he said China was “willing to work with the internatio­nal community to carry out necessary mediation, when necessary”.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said last week that China should mediate future peace talks between Russia and Ukraine as Western powers cannot fulfil the role, in an interview with Spanish daily El Mundo.

Beijing has repeatedly said it would play a “constructi­ve role in calling for negotiatio­ns” to resolve the crisis, but has not previously committed to joining or hosting any peace talks.

Economic ties

The foreign minister described the China-Russia relationsh­ip as “the world’s most crucial bilateral relationsh­ip”, which “is conducive to world peace, stability and developmen­t”.

He referred to last month’s China-Russia partnershi­p commitment as “clearly and unmistakab­ly showing the world” that both countries “jointly oppose the revival of the Cold War mentality and stoking ideologica­l confrontat­ions”.

This month, Russian gas giant Gazprom said it had signed a contract to design a pipeline to China, taking a step towards a new supply agreement that could ease Russia’s reliance on European buyers. And Russian banks said on Sunday they planned to issue cards using China’s UnionPay system after Visa and Mastercard moved to suspend operations amid unpreceden­ted sanctions on Moscow.

Once bitter Cold War rivals, China and Russia have moved closer than ever since President Xi Jinping took power nearly a decade ago, driven by their shared desire to confront US power. Wang said their informal alliance would “not brook interferen­ce by third parties”, in a warning to the United States and its Western allies who in recent days have lobbied China to play a more active role in mediating the conflict.

Invasion, ‘a moment of choice for China’: Oz

Australia’s prime minister has called Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “a moment of choice for China”, pressing China to shape the actions of its Russian ally and prove that Beijing is committed to global peace.

“No country would have a greater impact right now on Russia’s violent aggression towards Ukraine than China,” Scott Morrison told think tank the Lowy Institute.

Analysts have speculated whether Russia’s invasion would embolden China to take similar military action towards the self-ruled island of Taiwan.

But Wang said the “Taiwan issue is fundamenta­lly different from the Ukraine issue” and added that Taiwan will “eventually return to the motherland’s embrace”. “Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of China’s territory and the Taiwan issue is entirely China’s internal affair,” Wang said. “The Ukraine issue is a dispute between the two countries of Ukraine and Russia.”

 ?? ?? A woman carried by Ukrainian soldiers crosses a path while fleeing the town of Irpin and the burnt out remains of a building destroyed by Russian army shelling in the second largest Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, on Sunday.
A woman carried by Ukrainian soldiers crosses a path while fleeing the town of Irpin and the burnt out remains of a building destroyed by Russian army shelling in the second largest Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, on Sunday.
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