EMPIRE OF DUST How Xi Jinping’s ‘Red Empire’ dream crumbled into wasteland of abandoned railways, half-built bridges & roads to nowhere

CHINA’S bid to build a new “Red Empire” has left the world with a sea of roads to nowhere and half-built bridges.

Xi Jinping unveiled the world’s most ambitious infrastructure project 10 years ago this month – wooing Asia, Africa and the Middle East with bold promises.

The Montenegro highway which has left the country crippled with debtCredit: AFP
The Standard Gauge Railway in Kenya was halted in 2019 after China withheld fundingCredit: Alamy
The railway in Kenya was supposed to weave 290 milesCredit: Alamy

Dubbed the “project of the century”, the Belt and Road Initiative was billed as a mega plan to create trade routes through huge swathes of Eurasia, with China at the centre.

With promises of loans and vast infrastructure projects like roads, railways and bridges, more than 150 countries have signed up.

It all forms part of Xi’s plan for China to become the “most powerful global power” by extending a friendly hand to a web of potential new allies, experts said.

But a decade on, his vision appears to be crumbling in many parts of the world – halted by bankruptcy, corruption and mountains of debt.

And many nations ended up getting more than the bargained for.

Wooed by the glitzy sales pitch, many have been left unable to keep up with the return payments when China comes knocking like a loan shark.

Building projects end up being ditched or unfinished until the debt is settled – with the Communist Party more than happy to take their pound of flesh.

As debt mounts, it’s feared more of these projects will go unfinished – and greedy Chinese lenders will seize control of land and key assets in lieu of repayment.

Countries such as Sri Lanka, Kenya, Montenegro, Laos and Kazakhstan have found themselves crippled by debt and reliant on Beijing.

Ashok Swain, professor of peace and security at Uppsala University, believes Xi’s project even acted as a “catalyst” for conflict in some nations.

“While the Belt and Road Initiative has contributed to infrastructure advancement, it has also been a catalyst for conflicts between countries and exacerbated debt issues in some instances,” he told The Sun.

Some unfinished projects have come to a screeching halt after local officials were sentenced for corruption.

In Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, enormous concrete columns are a daily reminder of a China-funded railway that was stopped after a corruption scandal.

In Kenya, a railway connecting the coastal city of Mombasa to Nairobi was left half-finished – ending in a field a few hundred miles short of its destination.

According to research lab AidData, one-third of projects have been plagued by furious protests, corruption scandals, labour violations, or environment problems.

After a decade of construction, experts told The Sun that Xi’s flagship project has mostly crumbled – leaving many poorer countries trapped by China’s control.

Expanding its tendrils across the world, analysts have long believed the Belt and Road Initiative is being used to boost China’s power.

Some suggest that it is a plan to further China’s ambitions using “predatory loans” and “debt traps” to bring nations’ under their sphere of influence.

Shaun Breslin, professor of politics and international studies at Warwick University, warned that some countries have become “too reliant” on China – ending up in a debt spiral with unfinished projects.

“There have been increasing questions about the wisdom of becoming too reliant on Chinese finance and ending up in forms of debt dependence on China in various countries along the Belt and Road, and this might become more important,” he previously told The Sun.

Under Xi – China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong – China has admitted it has grand plans to establish itself on the world stage as a “pioneering global influence” by 2050.

The Chinese leader is shoring up allies around the world – whether through open diplomacy or more sinister economic policies, such as “debt traps”.

China’s tendrils now extend far beyond the Indo-Pacific – reaching deep into the Middle East, Africa and beyond.

They boast of an “all-weather” partnership with Pakistan, a mutual defence treaty with North Korea, and an “unbreakable” friendship with Belarus.

“It has substantially broadened China’s sphere of influence in Africa, Asia, and even South America,” Professor Swain told The Sun.

“In terms of power politics, Xi has successfully realised his objectives through the Belt and Road Initiative – positioning China at the forefront of global power politics.

“In most parts of Sub-Saharan, China has already displaced the US and has become the primary influencer,” Ashok Swain, professor of peace and security at Uppsala University, told The Sun.

“China is also fast becoming a major power player in the Middle East.

“Even in Israel, China’s influence has expanded rapidly. In the coming years, the potential flashpoints will be Iran and Ethiopia.

“China is already openly engaged in recruiting these two countries as allies while the US is doing everything to retain its influences.”

British MI6 chief Richard Moore also warned China’s use of money is means to “get people on the hook”.

Speaking to BBC Radio Four, he said the country has also enlisted the use of “data traps” as it attempts to build it’s global intelligence.

“If you allow another country to gain access to really critical data about your society, over time that will erode your sovereignty, you no longer have control over that data,” he explained.

“That’s something which, I think, in the UK we are very alive to and we’ve taken measures to defend against.”

Professor Kerry Brown, from the Lau China Institute at King’s College London, said China is “tired of the West’s victories”.

He told The Sun: “China is trying to show that it’s not just a choice between the West’s way of resolving issues or nothing else, but there might, there just might, be another way.

“It is tired of the West’s victories, which are often short sighted, short term and self interested.”

Prof Brown said “some of the lessons have been good, some bad” in Xi’s decade-long project.

“In some places, the money associated with it has bled away due to corruption, in others because of inefficiency, and elsewhere because of change of governments and broader political factors,” he said.

“The best we can say is that in the last decade at least China and the world have learned a lot about working with each other – some of the lessons have been good, some bad.

“Where the environment is less stable – like in parts of Africa or the Middle East – then Chinese investment continues to be prone to accusations of low local benefit coming due to import of Chinese labour, poor environmental standards, and corruption.

Source: https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/23930636/china-half-built-bridges-roads-to-nowhere/

China’s Xi opens Hangzhou Asian Games, ceremony dazzles

A general view as people hold flags of the participant nations during the opening ceremony of the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China on Sep 23, 2023. (Photo: Reuters/Marko Djurica)

Chinese President Xi Jinping opened the COVID-delayed 19th Asian Games in the Eastern city of Hangzhou during a spectacular and at times raucous ceremony on Saturday (Sep 23), which organisers hope will lift the mood in a nation struggling with an economic slump.

Spectators in the city’s 80,000-capacity stadium let out a huge roar as Xi was introduced and walked in to sit with visiting dignitaries including International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad

The Games, delayed a year due to China’s measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, will be the country’s biggest sporting event in over a decade in several metrics, with around 12,000 athletes from 45 nations competing in 40 sports.

After the Chinese flag was brought out, the first team out was Afghanistan, whose female athletes, based abroad due to sport for women being banned by the Taliban, walked together with their male counterparts. Their flagbearers carried the tri-colour flag for Afghanistan which is used by international resistance movements and shunned by the Taliban.

Several teams including Chinese Taipei were vocally welcomed by the spectators, but none more than the home team, whose athletes are expected to dominate the medals table once again.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan attend the opening ceremony of the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China on Sep 23, 2023. (Photo: Sport Singapore via Reuters/Weixiang Lim)

They also mark a stark contrast to the cheerless Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics which took place under China’s strict zero COVID conditions which lasted for nearly three years from January 2020 until late 2022.

“I feel excited, particularly as a Hangzhou local,” said a man surnamed Zhao on his way into the stadium. “It’s a great chance to show the world how nice our city is … it was also delayed by a year. But that gave us a chance to prepare even better.”

In an often spell-binding ceremony intended to burnish Hangzhou’s status as one of China’s centres of technology and creativity, dozens of balletic dancers hovered above a digitally projected lake in the wake of a flotilla of sail-boards.

In a modern take on the traditional lighting of the cauldron, a huge, digitally animated torchbearer “ran” the length of the stadium before settling to loom above the actual torch-bearer, China’s Olympic champion swimmer Wang Shun.

In synch, the pair lit a huge, multi-pronged cauldron, prompting another bout of cheering and soon after, a digital firework display.

But many of those not lucky enough to get a ticket grumbled about disruption.

A sizeable “traffic control area” around the city’s Olympic stadium was blocked off, at least one metro station was shut and other Games centres were closed and deliveries were disrupted on Saturday.

Source: https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sport/asian-games-hangzhou-opening-ceremony-3793906

Kim Jong Un tells Xi Jinping in letter he hopes to promote cooperation

Chinese President Xi Jinping and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un walk during Xi’s visit in Pyongyang, North Korea in this picture released by by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on June 21, 2019. KCNA via REUTERS/File Photo

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has vowed to promote cooperative relations with China in a letter to President Xi Jinping, the North’s state media KCNA reported on Sunday.

The letter was in response to congratulations Xi sent for the North’s founding anniversary this month where the Chinese president had expressed his willingness to strengthen strategic communication and working-level cooperation.

“I believe … the DPRK-China friendly and cooperative relations would steadily develop in conformity with the requirements of the new era and the desire of the two peoples in the future,” Kim said in the letter sent on Thursday.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/north-koreas-kim-tells-xi-letter-he-hopes-promote-cooperation-kcna-2023-09-23/S

China’s defence minister, ‘missing’ for over 2 weeks, under investigation: Report

Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu, missing for more than two weeks, is believed to have been placed under investigation, according to US officials.

Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu believed to have been placed under investigation (Credits: AP)

Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu, who has not been seen in public for over two weeks, has been placed under investigation, the US government believes.

According to the US, Shangfu has also been stripped of his responsibilities as defence minister, the Financial Times reported.

Taking to X, Rahm Emanuel, the US envoy to Japan, wrote, “President Xi’s cabinet lineup is now resembling Agatha Christie’s novel ‘And Then There Were None’.”

“First, foreign minister Qin Gang goes missing, then the rocket force commanders go missing and now defence minister Li Shangfu hasn’t been seen in public for two weeks,” he wrote.

“Who’s going to win this unemployment race? China’s youth or Xi’s cabinet?” Emanuel said.

He further quoted Shakespeare in Hamlet and wrote, “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.” 1st: Defense Minister Li Shangfu hasn’t been seen or heard from in 3 weeks. 2nd: He was a no-show for his trip to Vietnam. Now: He’s absent from his scheduled meeting with the Singaporean Chief of Navy because he was placed on house arrest???…Might be getting crowded in there. Good news is I heard he’s paid off his mortgage with the Country Garden real estate developers.”

Shangfu’s supposed disappearance came after Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang went missing in July.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/world/story/chinese-defence-minister-li-shangfu-missing-weeks-investigation-us-government-officials-xi-jinping-2435888-2023-09-15

‘I Am Going to Bed…’: Biden Abruptly Ends Vietnam Presser, Snubs Question on Dialogue With China’s Xi

I’ll just follow my orders here. Staff, is there anybody that hasn’t spoken yet? I ain’t calling on you, Joe Biden said during the presser. (Reuters file)

While addressing media in Vietnam following the G20 Summit, US President Joe Biden, in response to a question about why he hasn’t spoken to Chinese President Xi Jinping, joked, “I tell you what, I don’t know about you, but I’m going to go to bed.”

China and Russia’s respective presidents, Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin did not attend the G20 Summit in New Delhi.

“I’ll just follow my orders here. Staff, is there anybody that hasn’t spoken yet? I ain’t calling on you,” Joe Biden said during the presser.

Biden also noted he does not want to “contain” China, as the two powers face deepening divisions on trade, security and rights.

The US President said he had met Chinese Premier Li Qiang at the G20 summit in New Delhi and discussed “stability”. The meeting, however, was not announced by the White House.

“One of the things that are going on now is China is beginning to change some of the rules of the game, in terms of trade and other issues,” Biden stated.

Source: https://www.news18.com/world/i-am-going-to-bed-biden-abruptly-ends-vietnam-presser-snubs-question-on-dialogue-with-chinas-xi-8573362.html

Xi’s skipping of G20 Summit may have more to do with China than with India

Chinese President Xi Jinping is giving a miss to G20 Summit in New Delhi. But if experts are to be believed, it might have more to do with Xi’s economic and political problems at home than China’s friction with India.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has recently been reprimanded by Communist Party elders over his policy decisions. (Image: AFP)

Chinese President Xi Jinping was born in the lap of luxury but, as his father was purged during China’s Cultural Revolution, a young Xi had to toil in the farms as a manual labourer in the countryside for 6 years. Those struggles would be nothing compared to the task the all-supreme leader now faces.

Xi is skipping the G20 Summit in New Delhi and experts have failed to pin-point the one big reason why China is sending Premier Li Qiang instead.

It is true that China’s relationship with India has been mostly frosty since the border clashes in May 2020. And it is also possible that the Chinese government decided to send Premier Li Qiang instead of President Xi to send out a signal. But the Chinese government has maintained that it was ready to work with all the parties for the global event’s success in New Delhi this week.

Also, Xi might not want to share the stage with the “tough crowd” at the G20. Many G20 member countries have “hardened their positions on China” in the last decade, said Paul Haenle, director of think-tank Carnegie China, adding, “It’s a tough crowd for Xi”.

What experts are also hinting at is that Xi Jinping’s skipping the India-hosted G20 event could be due to the mounting troubles in China itself. So, is Xi staying back home where the real trouble is?

Given Xi’s focus on domestic issues, he might be unwilling to travel abroad, Alfred Wu, said associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore.

“Xi Jinping is setting his own agenda where his top concern is national security and he has to stay in China and make foreign leaders visit him instead,” Wu told Reuters.

Wu says the over-emphasis on security is hurting China’s diplomatic ties and the attempt to rejuvenate its economy. China’s economy is in bad shape, and it is among Xi’s biggest headaches.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/nation/story/xi-jinping-g20-summit-delhi-not-attending-due-to-political-china-economy-political-troubles-military-purge-2432412-2023-09-07

Map controversy casts shadow on Xi Jinping’s India visit for G20 summit

By releasing the so-called standard map of China, Beijing wants to teach India a lesson for rejecting normalization of ties until border issues are sorted out.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping.

On the eve of India hosting the G20 summit in New Delhi, China released a so-called “standard map” coopting parts of eastern Ladakh as per the rejected 1959 line and Arunachal Pradesh in the Middle Kingdom apart from Taiwan and the South China Sea.

This cartographic expansion by Beijing duly amplified by Chinese propaganda through social media was immediately rebutted and rejected by the Modi government as Arunachal Pradesh is an integral part of India and parts of Aksai Chin were occupied by Mao’s China in the 1950s even before the disastrous 1962 war. While India was signing the Panchsheel Agreement in 1954, China was building a highway linking occupied Tibet with occupied Sinkiang (called Xinjiang) through Aksai Chin with the then government rather oblivious to the facts.

The timing of the release of the map by China clearly has ominous portends as it poses serious questions on whether President Xi Jinping is inclined to attend the G20 summit in the Indian capital or has other plans. We are told that China releases the standard map every year but it is the first time that India has lodged a serious protest with Beijing, rejecting the territorial claims of the Middle Kingdom.

The larger question is why did Beijing release the so-called standard map and get it amplified by its propaganda media through social media platforms ? The answer lies in the recently concluded BRICS summit in Johannesburg, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi had a brief interaction with President Xi Jinping at the leaders’ lounge of the summit. It is understood that China wanted a bilateral meeting with India on the sidelines of the summit and push for normalization of ties without conceding an inch on the pending problems of Depsang Bulge and Demchok in Eastern Ladakh. Given the schedule restraints of PM Modi, the formal meeting between the two leaders could not take place and was limited to a brief interaction only. Even during the brief interaction, PM Modi raised his concerns over the border issue, clearly indicating that the road to normalization of ties goes through disengagement and de-escalation on the East Ladakh border and resolution of the remaining two friction points.

Source : https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/will-president-xi-jinping-come-to-india-for-the-g20-summit-101693367861345.html

Modi, Xi ask officials to ‘intensify’ efforts for disengagement of troops along LAC

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, centre right speaks to China’s President Xi Jinping as President of Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula, left, and Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi look on, at the in Johannesburg, South Africa, Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023.Credit: PTI/AP

The leaders of India and China have agreed to step up efforts for mutually pulling back frontline troops from the remaining face-off points along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh in order to end the more-than-three-year-long military stand-off.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping did not have a formal bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the 15th BRICS summit at Johannesburg in South Africa. They, however, had a ‘conversation’, Foreign Secretary Vinay Mohan Kwatra said after the end of the summit on Thursday. He quoted Modi conveying to Xi the concerns of New Delhi over “the unresolved issues along the LAC in the western sector of India-China border areas”.

The prime minister underlined during his conversation with the president of the neighbouring communist country that maintenance of peace and tranquillity in the border areas and observing and respecting the LAC were essential for the normalisation of the bilateral relationship. “Two leaders agreed to direct relevant officials to intensify efforts at expeditious disengagement and de-escalation”, Kwatra said, while briefing journalists about the prime minister’s participation in the BRICS summit.

This was the second time Modi and Xi had a conversation on the bilateral relations between New Delhi and Beijing after the aggressive moves by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to unilaterally change the status quo along the LAC in eastern Ladakh and the resistance and counter-deployment by the Indian Army in April-May 2020 had started a military stand-off in the Himalayas. The relations between the two nations hit a new low after the stand-off had reached a flashpoint with the violent clash between the soldiers of the Indian Army and the Chinese PLA in Galwan Valley on June 15, 2020.

Source: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/pm-modi-raises-border-concerns-with-chinas-xi-on-sidelines-of-brics-summit-2659788

Xi Jinping Cries Foul, Says Rules Being Written by Those with ‘Strongest Muscles’ at BRICS Meet

President of China Xi Jinping attends the plenary session during the 2023 BRICS Summit at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Image: Reuters)

Chinese President Xi Jinping said that all nations should write and uphold international rules based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and not by those who have the “strongest muscles or the loudest of voice”.

The Chinese President’s statements will spark reactions from observers as China faces accusations of encroaching on territories of its neighbours on its western and eastern side. It also claims that it will reunify Taiwan with the motherland by force if necessary.

“International rules must be written and upheld jointly by all countries based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter rather than dictated by those with strongest muscles or the loudest of voice,” Xi Jinping said while addressing the open plenary session of the 15th BRICS Summit.

“BRICS countries should practise true multilateralism, stick to solidarity and oppose division,” Xi Jinping further added.

Xi Jinping said that BRICS nations must focus on championing the spirit of inclusiveness and promote peaceful coexistence and harmony between civilisations. “We should respect all modernisation paths that each country chooses on its own and oppose ideological rivalry, systemic confrontation and clash of civilisations,” Xi Jinping said.

Source: https://www.news18.com/world/xi-jinping-cries-foul-says-rules-being-written-by-those-with-strongest-muscles-at-brics-meet-8547474.html

China’s Young People Can’t Find Jobs. Xi Jinping Says to ‘Eat Bitterness.’

With youth unemployment at a record, the Communist Party is trying to reset expectations about social mobility by talking up the virtue of hardship.

Gloria Li is desperate to find a job. Graduating last June with a master’s degree in graphic design, she started looking in the fall, hoping to find an entry-level position that pays about $1,000 a month in a big city in central China. The few offers she has gotten are internships that pay $200 to $300 a month, with no benefits.

Over two days in May she messaged more than 200 recruiters and sent her résumé to 32 companies — and lined up exactly two interviews. She said she would take any offer, including sales, which she was reluctant to consider previously.

“A decade or so ago, China was thriving and full of opportunities,” she said in a phone interview. “Now even if I want to strive for opportunities, I don’t know which direction I should turn to.”

China’s young people are facing record-high unemployment as the country’s recovery from the pandemic is fluttering. They’re struggling professionally and emotionally. Yet the Communist Party and the country’s top leader, Xi Jinping, are telling them to stop thinking they are above doing manual work or moving to the countryside. They should learn to “eat bitterness,” Mr. Xi instructed, using a colloquial expression that means to endure hardships.

Many young Chinese aren’t buying it. They argue that they studied hard to get a college or graduate school degree only to find a shrinking job market, falling pay scale and longer work hours. Now the government is telling them to put up with hardships. But for what?

“Asking us to eat bitterness is like a deception, a way of hoping that we will unconditionally dedicate ourselves and undertake tasks that they themselves are unwilling to do,” Ms. Li said.

Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/30/business/china-youth-unemployment.html?auth=register-google

As Xi visits Russia, Putin sees his anti-U.S. world order taking shape

For Vladimir Putin, the state visit to Russia by Chinese President Xi Jinping, which begins on Monday, provides a giant morale boost and a chance to showcase the much-vaunted new world order that the Russian leader believes he is forging through his war on Ukraine — in which the United States and NATO can no longer dictate anything to anyone.

As Xi visits Russia, Putin sees his anti-U.S. world order taking shape
© Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP

Xi’s visit to Russia, just after cementing his precedent-breaking third term in power, brings together two men who have positioned themselves as leaders for life — and it sets the scene for global confrontation, with Beijing willing to use its partnership with Moscow to counter Washington, even if that means granting tacit approval to Putin’s brutal, destabilizing war.

“The grim outlook in China is that we are entering this era of confrontation with the U.S., the gloves are off, and Russia is an asset and a partner in this struggle,” said Alexander Gabuev, an analyst with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

It remains to be seen whether this confrontation will heat up, pushing three nuclear powers to the brink of World War III, or merely marks the opening chords of Cold War 2.0. But Xi’s visit shows sides being taken, with China, Russia and Iran lining up against the United States, Britain and other NATO allies — in a competition for global influence and for alliances with nations such as South Africa and Saudi Arabia, which seem ambivalent but up for grabs.

In an article published Sunday evening in China’s People’s Daily, Putin gushed about the brotherly friendship between Russia and China, which he said were standing “shoulder to shoulder,” including against Western hegemony.

“Sticking more stubbornly than ever to its obsolete dogmata and vanishing dominance, the ‘Collective West’ is gambling on the fates of entire states and peoples,” Putin wrote. “The U.S.’s policy of simultaneously deterring Russia and China, as well as all those who do not bend to the American dictation, is getting ever more fierce and aggressive.” He also warned that NATO is “seeking to penetrate the Asia-Pacific.”

Xi’s trip, billed in Russia as the signature diplomatic event of 2023, could hardly come at a more useful moment for Putin. With his invasion largely stalled, military casualties mounting, and his personal reputation newly stained by an arrest warrant for war crimes issued by the International Criminal Court, Putin is in desperate need of a distraction that props him up.

For the Russian domestic audience, the ceremonial pomp of hosting the Chinese leader will reinforce Putin’s image as a modern-day czar. Crowning the visit, a state dinner will be held in the spectacular 15th-century stone Faceted Chamber in the Kremlin, Moscow’s oldest building, constructed by Ivan III, the grand prince of Moscow, whose reputation as a “gatherer of lands” for annexing neighboring territories inspires Putin.

Light installations last month at Moscow’s Zaryadye Park in front of the Spasskaya Tower of the Kremlin and St. Basil’s Cathedral.
© Yuri Kadobnov/AFP/Getty Images

Given rampant second-guessing of Putin’s military strategy, the display of China and Russia as allies against the United States will also lend credibility to Putin’s assertions that the Ukraine war is the crucible by which Russia is creating the new post-American order.

ICC issues arrest warrant for Putin over war crimes in Ukraine
As the Chinese president lands in Russia, amid Putin’s feverish anti-Western rhetoric, the world is at a dangerous crossroads. The Russian leader has suspended New START, the only remaining arms control accord with Washington, and has staked his country’s future on what is now likely to be a long, unpredictable war, despite the staggering economic costs and misgivings of his own elite. The West, in turn, is sending more powerful arms to Ukraine, including tanks and fighter jets.

The alignment of authoritarian leaders may see the world divided into opposing camps for decades, stymieing cooperation on climate change, choking global action on human rights abuses, paralyzing international institutions and increasing tensions in contested regions.

But while Putin is searching for allies who can send weapons, boost trade or at least support him in global forums, for Xi, the visit seems more about positioning Beijing globally than about Russia or Ukraine, said Aleksei Chigadayev, a China analyst at Leipzig University and former lecturer at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics who left Russia because of the invasion.

“It’s a demonstration to the world, ‘We can mediate in international conflicts, and we are a reliable partner,’” Chigadayev said of Xi’s visit.

It is also a warning, he said, to Washington on the need to negotiate with Beijing and to Europe on China’s importance as a major global power. He added that the visit sends a message to Central Asia, Africa and the Middle East that China is a more viable source of support than the United States.

Xi may also be intent on demonstrating to Putin that if there is a new world order, then China will lead it.

Source: https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/world/as-xi-visits-russia-putin-sees-his-antius-world-order-taking-shape/ar-AA18PgUC?ocid=sapphireappshare

China-proposed initiative on global civilization hailed

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and Chinese president, attends the CPC in Dialogue with World Political Parties High-Level Meeting via video link and delivers a keynote address in Beijing, capital of China, March 15, 2023. [Photo/Xinhua]
Initiative: Cultural diversity emphasized

Leaders of political parties and organizations from around the world have hailed the China-proposed Global Civilization Initiative, saying that it has great relevance, together with the Global Development Initiative and Global Security Initiative, to building up countries’ consensus on addressing mounting global challenges in terms of peace, security, development and harmonious coexistence.

Their comments came as Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, unveiled the Global Civilization Initiative on Wednesday at the CPC in Dialogue with World Political Parties High-Level Meeting. The meeting’s theme was “Path Towards Modernization: the Responsibility of Political Parties”.

The initiative calls for respect for the diversity of civilizations, upholding the common values of humanity in pursuing peace, development, equity, justice, democracy and freedom, and promoting robust international people-to-people exchanges and cooperation.

Political leaders who took part in the virtual meeting spoke positively about Xi’s initiative and expressed their willingness to work with the CPC to play a guiding role in promoting exchanges and mutual learning of civilizations and pursuing a path toward modernization based on their own national contexts.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is also the president of the African National Congress, the ruling party of South Africa, said that he fully agrees with Xi’s initiative.

The history of South Africa in struggling for national independence makes its people value the importance of unity, harmony, inclusiveness and mutual respect, he said.

The initiative is particularly important considering the destructive challenges that the world is facing, such as climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, terrorism and geopolitical confrontation, Ramaphosa added.

He also said that South Africa appreciates China’s foreign policy based on noninterference in domestic affairs and mutually beneficial cooperation, which are reflected in China’s global initiatives and are crucial to promoting the collective growth of developing countries.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, also president of the Serbian Progressive Party, said that the world is expecting China to provide innovative solutions to coping with challenges amid the complex changes of the international landscape.

Vucic said humanity should work together to advocate the diversity of cultures and civilizations.

The Serbian president also said, echoing Xi’s speech on Wednesday, that nations should uphold the principles of equality, mutual learning, dialogue and inclusiveness and should, as Xi said, “let cultural exchanges transcend estrangement, mutual learning transcend clashes, and inclusiveness transcend any sense of superiority”.

In his speech, Xi, who is also Chinese president and chairman of the Central Military Commission, underlined the need for all countries to refrain from imposing their own values or models on others and from stoking ideological confrontation.

At a moment when geopolitical competition has brought about crises and challenges, Xi’s initiatives regarding development, security and civilization are very significant to international and regional peace and cooperation, said Mongolian Prime Minister Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene, who is also chairman of the Mongolian People’s Party.

He added that Mongolia fully supports the initiatives, and mutual trust, dialogue and cooperation are common aspirations of humanity and represent the future of the world.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir, who is also chairman of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement, criticized a number of countries’ reluctance to build an equitable and balanced global governance system. These nations are eager to instigate geopolitical competition, resulting in complex global security threats, he said.

Source : https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202303/16/WS64132d59a31057c47ebb4ea7.html

Li Qiang: Xi Jinping’s right-hand man behind sweeping Covid lockdown elected China’s new premier

Li Qiang has formally become China’s next premier in a role that has traditionally entailed wielding broad authority over economic policy for the world’s second-largest economy.

Mr Li was formally elected on Saturday as the second most powerful man in China, after president Xi Jinping had earlier nominated the 63-year-old for the role.

The National People’s Congress had 2,936 votes in favour of Mr Li, and three against him. There were eight abstentions.

The new premier previously served as Shanghai’s Communist Party chief, and recently gained notoriety for implementing last year’s bruising two-month Covid lockdown in Shanghai. Mr Li also pushed for the sudden and chaotic end to the country’s zero-Covid policy after unprecedented protests.

His appointment comes during an annual political event in which Mr Xi secured an unprecedented third term as president on Friday, solidifying his unchallenged grip on power and opening up the possibility that he could remain in power for life.

Mr Li replaces Li Keqiang, who served as China’s premier for 10 years. Li Keqiang, a former Communist Party official, made what appeared to be a veiled attack on Mr Xi in a farewell message to his staff: “While people work, heaven watches. Heaven has eyes.”

Li Qiang is tasked with reviving the world’s second-largest economy, which is yet to emerge from the effects of three years of sweeping Covid restrictions.

Traditionally, the premiership conveys significant influence over economic policy. The power of the role, however, has been eroded under Mr Xi’s leadership during the past decade, as the president has primarily consolidated control in his own hands.

Some analysts believe Mr Li could play a larger – if not more influential – role than his predecessor. But this will be no easy task, as he is expected to tackle an economic downturn as the government expects to expand the economy by “around 5 per cent” this year – the lowest target in more than three decades.

China is facing a historic decline in its key housing market, consumer spending is languishing, and unemployment remains high among its youth amid the waning trust of investors.

Source : https://www.independent.co.uk/asia/china/li-qiang-new-china-premier-xi-jinping-b2298622.html

Exit mobile version