Page 73 - bne magazine July 2022_20220704
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 bne July 2022 Eurasia I 73
 No geopolitics here. / Kazakh Foreign Ministry.
China hectors Central Asia to steer clear of big power politics
“financial terrorism” and “economic weaponization.”
Kazakhstan, and other Central Asian states, have broadly sought to distance themselves from Russia over the war, without issuing any outright condemnation of their ally.
The readout of the meeting from Tokayev’s office studiously avoided mention of Wang’s lecture.
It focused instead on Wang conveying Chinese President Xi Jinping’s support for Tokayev’s domestic political agenda. Xi’s intention to visit Kazakhstan in the autumn also featured.
Wang was in Nur-Sultan for a meeting with regional foreign ministers on June 8, the third in a relatively new format called Central Asia-China.
The meeting ended with boilerplate statements about boosting cooperation as an “important factor for sustainable socioeconomic development and the preservation of peace, stability and security in the region.”
Central Asian governments used the talks to push for improved transport links with China.
One project under consideration is a railroad linking China with Uzbekistan via Kyrgyzstan, which was first mooted
Joanna Lillis for Eurasianet
Central Asian countries should stay out of geopolitical conflicts, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi has warned his counterparts from the region during a visit to Kazakhstan.
Wang clearly had an audience beyond Central Asia in mind when he exhorted that “the region should be on guard against attempts by forces outside the region to draw regional countries into major power conflicts and force them to take sides.”
But Central Asian governments might be forgiven for interpreting this browbeating as a patronising attempt by their mighty neighbour to dictate how they should run their foreign policies.
China’s Foreign Ministry laid out Beijing’s position in a readout following Wang’s meeting with Kazakhstani President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev
in Nur-Sultan on June 7.
Both “expressed deep concerns about the serious spillover impacts of the Ukraine crisis,” the ministry said, using a euphemism since it refuses to call Russia’s aggression a “war.”
“China hopes that Central Asian countries will stand firm, eliminate interference, strengthen coordination, cooperate in good faith and safeguard regional peace and stability,” it added. “China has never sought geopolitical interests in Central Asia, and never allows non-regional forces to stir up trouble in the region.”
That is a reference to China’s arch enemy, the United States, which
“China has not condemned Russia’s aggression. But it has condemned what it deems “illegal” international sanctions against its partner Russia as “financial terrorism” and “economic weaponization”
has strongly condemned Russia’s war in Ukraine and introduced sanctions, along with the rest of the Western world.
China has not condemned Russia’s aggression. But it has condemned what it deems “illegal” international sanctions against its partner Russia as
more than two decades ago and is again on regional officials’ lips.
Kyrgyz Prime Minister Akylbek Japarov said last month that the governments were preparing to sign an agreement in September to start building the
CKU line – although first a route must be agreed and a feasibility study completed.
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