Tag: Xi Jinping

  • Attempts to split China doomed – Xi Jinping

    Chinese President Xi Jinping has delivered a fervently nationalistic closing speech to parliament, painting China as the rising global power.

    Mr. Xi said “achieving total unity” was the “collective hope of all Chinese people” and any attempts to divide it were “doomed to fail.”

    The speech was a strong warning against any attempt at separatism from places like Taiwan and Hong Kong, the BBC reports.

    Mr. Xi also warned China could not be complacent about its development.

    Meanwhile, Premier Li Keqiang used his once-a-year news conference to say China was committed to global co-operation on trade.

    He said China would further open up its economy and “ensure that both domestic and foreign firms” were “able to compete on fair terms in China’s large market.”

    Chinese officials have made similar pledges in the past.

    The premier’s comments are a marked contrast to the recent protectionist rhetoric and threats of tariffs from the Donald Trump’s administration in the United States.

    Xi Jinping became president in 2013 and now looks likely to lead China indefinitely, after the National People’s Congress (NPC) – a rubber-stamp parliamentary session that meets once a year – voted to remove a two-term limit on the presidency from the constitution.

    He is now considered the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao Zedong, and has further cemented his position by moving many of his key allies in to leadership roles during the NPC.

  • Buhari congratulates Xi Jinping on re-election

     

    President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated the Chinese President Xi Jinping on his re-election as the President of the Peoples Republic of China.

    In a letter personally signed by him, the Nigerian leader praised his Chinese counterpart for his wisdom and vision.

    “On behalf of the Government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, I congratulate you most sincerely on your re-election as the President of the Peoples Republic of China.

    “Your re-election is an indication of the trust and confidence reposed in you by the people of China on your ability to bring your vision and wisdom to bear in the conduct of national and global affairs,” he said.

    President Buhari also looked forward to increased cooperation between China and Nigeria on one hand and China and Africa on the other hand.

    “It is my firm belief that your re-election will also bolster the existing mutually benefiting partnership between the Peoples Republic of China and Nigeria.

    “I look forward to meeting Your Excellency at the forthcoming Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) Beijing Summit in September 2018. I am confident that it will be a great success and good opportunity to draw up new levels of partnership between Africa and China,” President Buhari said.

     

  • Buhari congratulates President Xi Jinping on re-election

    President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated the Chinese President Xi Jinping on his re-election as the President of the Peoples Republic of China.

    In a letter personally signed by him, the Nigerian leader praised his Chinese counterpart for his wisdom and vision.

    “On behalf of the Government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, I congratulate you most sincerely on your re-election as the President of the Peoples Republic of China.

    “Your re-election is an indication of the trust and confidence reposed in you by the people of China on your ability to bring your vision and wisdom to bear in the conduct of national and global affairs,” he said.

    President Buhari also looked forward to increased cooperation between China and Nigeria on one hand and China and Africa on the other hand.

    “It is my firm belief that your re-election will also bolster the existing mutually benefiting partnership between the Peoples Republic of China and Nigeria.

    “I look forward to meeting Your Excellency at the forthcoming Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) Beijing Summit in September 2018. I am confident that it will be a great success and good opportunity to draw up new levels of partnership between Africa and China,” President Buhari said.

     

  • Buhari congratulates China on Lunar Year

    Buhari congratulates China on Lunar Year

    President Muhammadu Buhari has rejoiced with China on the Chinese Lunar New Year.

    According to the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, the President conveyed his goodwill message in a letter addressed to the Chinese President, Xi Jinping.

    “As you commence festivities marking the Chinese Year of Dog on February 16, 2018, we congratulate and wish the Chinese people a prosperous and peaceful New Year. I understand that the Chinese believe dogs are associated with affinity and prosperity,”  Buhari wrote in the letter.

    The President acknowledged the accomplishments of the Asian powerhouse in the past year globally and domestically especially on the economic and the political fronts:

    “In the past year of the Rooster, China recorded tremendous achievements in its economy, democracy and foreign relations, among others.

    Read Also: Buhari retires Justice Ademola, dismisses another judge Tokode

    “The successful convening of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China opens a new chapter for China’s New Era as a global leader in innovation, security, poverty alleviation, infrastructure and development financing,” he added.

    Buhari also commended the close bilateral relationship between China and Nigeria on one hand and Sino-African relations on the other hand.

    He said, “This year marks the 47th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Nigeria and China, I am pleased to see that political, economic, cultural and social ties between our two countries are getting stronger.

    “I am looking forward to China hosting the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) summit in Beijing in September this year, and have every reason to believe that the Year of Dog will bring us more success stories and mutual benefits for China-Africa cooperation.

    “May the year of Dog see Nigeria-China friendship blossom and flourish for the benefit of our peoples.”

  • Melania Trump visits elementary school in Beijing

    Melania Trump visits elementary school in Beijing

    U.S. First Lady Melania Trump on Thursday visited Banchang Elementary School in Beijing, accompanied by Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    Trump and Peng joined the students in their English, astronomy and Peking Opera classes, and watched their singing and dancing performances.

    Peng told Trump that Banchang is a public school.

    Teaching facilities have been improving in recent years, and the standard of education rising.

    The students showed their self-designed Qipao, a kind of traditional Chinese dress, and invited the guests to help finish their wash painting of a little panda.

    In a cookery class, Peng and Trump joined the pupils in making a famous Beijing snack and apple pie.

    The students also presented their calligraphy and handicraft to the ladies, and gave performances at the school auditorium.

    Peng and Trump agreed that Chinese and American children could and should know more about each other and make friends.

    Melania Trump is in Beijing with U.S. President Donald Trump for a three-day visit.

    Read Also: UK’s Daily Mail to pay Melania Trump damages over modeling claims  

  • Flash floods claim over 100 lives

    Flash floods claim over 100 lives

    The death toll following flash floods in Central Vietnam has risen to 106, authorities said on Wednesday, with 25 people still missing and 197 others receiving treatment for their injuries.

    Khanh Hoa province, home to the popular beach resort city of Nha Trang, reported 39 dead, followed by Quang Nam province with 24 dead, Vietnam’s National Committee for Search and Rescue said in a report to the government.

    Authorities are sending more than 18,000 soldiers to take part in search-and-rescue operations and to deal with the aftermath of the flood, the Committee added.

    Typhoon Damrey made landfall on Saturday with winds of up to 135 kilometres per hour.

    Regional rainfall of up to 1,800 millimetres has been recorded for the past eight days, according to the committee.

    Rain is expected to ease off from Thursday.

    The storm damaged 121,000 houses, killed nearly 10,000 pigs and cows, knocked down power lines and uprooted countless trees.

    10 cargo ships and nearly 1,300 fishing boats have sunk.

    Typhoon Damrey arrived days before a global foreign leaders’ summit for next week’s APEC conference in Da Nang, where weather authorities said there was a risk of flooding and landslides.

    U.S. President Donald Trump is scheduled to arrive on Friday for the leaders’ summit, which Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin is also expected to attend.

  • China punishes 1.3m officials for corruption

    China punishes 1.3m officials for corruption

    China President Xi Jinping’s anti-graft drive, which has targeted officials at all levels, has punished more than 1.3 million people in five years, the anti-corruption watchdog said Sunday.

    The anti-corruption campaign, which Jinping launched shortly after becoming the Communist Party’s leader in 2012, was meant to fall both high-level “tigers” within the party and “flies” in lower bureaucratic ranks.

    More than 1.3 million officials at the township level or lower have been punished in the past five years, including 648,000 village officials, said the party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

    The announcement comes just as the Communist Party is preparing to convene, starting Oct.18 in a congress that takes place once every five years to anoint the party’s top leadership.

    Jinping is largely expected to remain president for another five years but some reshuffling might take place in the Politburo Standing Committee, the top decision-making body.

    Critics say the president has used the anti-graft campaign as a way to purge political opponents and consolidate power, along with other strategies such as tightening the control over state media and restructuring the military.

    Former high-flyers whose heads have rolled in the anti-corruption drive include; Zhou Yongkang, a former security chief and Standing Committee member.

    Others were Bo Xilai, former Commerce Ministry and Governor of Liaoning Province; and Sun Zhengcai, a former party secretary of Chongqing who had been seen as a potential successor to Jinping.

    The head of the anti-corruption agency, Wang Qishan, is Jinping’s close friend and might remain in the Standing Committee despite passing the informal retirement age of 68.

    NAN

  • China to U.S: Don’t escalate tensions with North Korea

    China to U.S: Don’t escalate tensions with North Korea

    China’s President Xi Jinping has urged United States President, Donald Trump and North Korea to avoid “words and actions” that worsen tensions.

    Mr. Trump and North Korea have been exchanging hostile rhetoric, with the U.S president threatening to rain “fire and fury” on the North.

    But China, North Korea’s only major ally, has been urging restraint, the BBC reports.

    A White House statement said the U.S and China agreed North Korea must stop “provocative and escalatory behavior.”

    Long-standing tensions over North Korea’s nuclear programme worsened when it tested two intercontinental ballistic missiles in July.

    The regime was also angered by last week’s United Nations decision to increase economic sanctions against it.

    According to Chinese state media, Mr. Xi told Mr. Trump in a phone call that “all relevant parties” should stop “words and deeds” that would exacerbate the situation.

    Mr. Xi also stressed China and the U.S shared “common interests” over denuclearisation and maintaining peace on the Korean peninsula.

  • President Xi arrives in Germany in advance of G20 summit

    President Xi arrives in Germany in advance of G20 summit

    Chinese President, Xi Jinping, arrived in Berlin on Wednesday, part of a flurry of diplomatic meetings in advance of G20 summit slated for Friday and Saturday in Hamburg.

    Xi was greeted with military honours by German President, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, before heading off to a meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    He stopped on the way to sign the guest book at Bellevue Palace, the president’s official residence.

    Next on his agenda was a visit to Berlin’s zoo with Merkel, where the two are to view a pair of pandas that recently arrived in the German capital, a gift from China.

    The evening will be rounded out with a banquet hosted by the German president.

    Xi and Merkel will both attend the G20 summit, where they are expected to discuss a host of topics with other world leaders, including joint policies on climate change and world trade.

    NAN reports that Xi had a stop over in Russia where he met with President Vladmir Putin on Monday where they discussed bilateral cooperation and coordinate positions on a range of international issues ahead of the G20 Summit in Hamburg.

  • Xi says China-U.S. relations affected by ‘negative factors’

    Xi says China-U.S. relations affected by ‘negative factors’

    China-U.S. relations have been affected by some “negative factors,” Chinese President Xi Jinping told President Donald Trump during a phone call on Monday.

    The conversation came after a series of recent actions by the U.S. related to Taiwan, North Korea and the South China Sea that have been labeled by Beijing as “wrong decisions” or “provocations.”

    Xi told Trump he hoped the U.S. would handle Taiwan-related issues appropriately and that China places great importance on Trump’s reaffirmation of the “One China” policy, which prohibits countries that have diplomatic relations with Beijing from pursuing official ties with Taiwan, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

    On Thursday, the U.S. government angered Beijing when it approved a 1.4-billion-dollar arms sale to Taiwan, which Beijing sees as a breakaway province.

    China asked the U.S. to cancel the deal lest it would damage “China-US relations and cooperation in important fields,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday.

    A U.S. government official said US arms sales to Taiwan reflect no change in the “one China” policy and are based on an assessment of Taiwan’s defence needs.

    The U.S. government also announced on Thursday it had imposed sanctions against China’s Bank of Dandong over its alleged dealings with North Korea.

    China’s Foreign Ministry retorted that the sanctions were a “wrong decision” made arbitrarily by the US outside the framework of the UN Security Council.

    on Sunday, a U.S. warship sailed close to a disputed island in the South China Sea claimed by China, prompting an angry response from Beijing, which described the action as a “serious provocation.”

    The guided-missile destroyer USS Stethem came within 12 miles of an island in the Paracel Archipelago, which is claimed by China, Taiwan and Vietnam, CNN reported.

    The ship was part of a U.S. Navy “freedom of navigation exercise,” the news network added.

    The operation “infringed upon China’s sovereignty, disrupted peace, security and order of the relevant waters and put in jeopardy the facilities and personnel on the Chinese islands, and thus constitutes a serious political and military provocation,” said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang.

    China had dispatched military vessels and fighter planes to warn the U.S. vessel, said Wu Qian, a spokesperson for China’s Ministry of National Defense.

    “The Chinese side will continue to take all necessary means to defend national sovereignty and security,” Lu added.

    China claims almost the entire South China Sea, a key shipping lane that is believed to be rich in resources. An international court in 2016 invalidated China’s claims to the region in a case filed by the Philippines, but Beijing does not recognise the ruling.

    This is the second “freedom of navigation operation” that has taken place during Donald Trump’s presidency.

    The exercises were done routinely under the Obama administration, however, Trump was at first mostly silent on the South China Sea issue while he turned to China for help in reining in the nuclear threat from North Korea.

    Trump and Xi also discussed the nuclear threat from North Korea during the phone call.

    Both leaders “reaffirmed their commitment to a denuclearised Korean Peninsula,” the White House said.