China vows ‘balanced’ approach to Ukraine conflict

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China vows ‘balanced’ approach to Ukraine conflict

Beijing will continue promoting a diplomatic settlement between Moscow and Kiev, according to the Chinese foreign minister

China will continue promoting an imminent ceasefire and a political settlement of the Ukraine conflict, the country’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi has said, according to the ministry’s website.

Wang made the remarks during a meeting with Russian Security Council Secretary Sergey Shoigu in St. Petersburg on Tuesday. The Chinese top diplomat had arrived in Russia for a two-day security meeting of high-ranking BRICS officials that kicked off on Wednesday.

“China has always maintained an objective and impartial attitude towards the Ukrainian issue and will continue to work to promote balanced, objective and rational voices in the international community, so as to build more international consensus and accumulate the necessary conditions for an early ceasefire and a political settlement of the crisis,” Wang said.

Shoigu, meanwhile, reportedly welcomed a recent joint call by China and Brazil for de-escalation of the conflict and said he was “pleased to see” that the proposal had gained international recognition.

In May, Beijing and Brasilia jointly issued a six-point peace plan for settling the Ukraine conflict, stressing that “dialogue and negotiation are the only viable way out of the crisis.” 

The proposal calls on both sides to adhere to three de-escalation principles: no expansion of the battlefield, no escalation of the fighting, and no provocations by any party.

Twenty-six countries reportedly supported the plan and more than 100 are said to have given a favorable response.

China has repeatedly said that the conflict between Moscow and Kiev must be resolved through negotiations.

In June, Switzerland hosted a Ukraine peace conference to which Russia was not invited. The event was mostly centered on Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s ‘peace formula,’ which stipulates that Russia must withdraw its forces from all territory claimed by Ukraine, a plan Moscow has long dismissed as “detached from reality.” 


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Top Russian officials have also cast doubt on the sincerity of Ukraine’s statements regarding peace talks. President Vladimir Putin reiterated last week that Ukraine’s Western backers intend on making Kiev “fight to the last Ukrainian” with the goal of inflicting “a strategic defeat” on Moscow. He stressed that any future negotiations should be based on the documents drafted during the talks in Istanbul in 2022.

Peace negotiations between the two countries broke down in the spring of 2022, with each side accusing the other of making unrealistic demands. According to Putin, Ukrainian negotiators initially agreed to Ukrainian neutrality and restrictions on the size of its military but later abandoned the talks under Western pressure.

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