China is “deeply” worried about the “crisis” in Ukraine, Premier Li Keqiang said Friday, warning that sanctions will hurt global growth.
"On Ukraine, indeed the current situation there is grave, and China is deeply concerned and grieved," Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told reporters Friday.
Li closed the roughly two-hour-long session with a pledge that China would continue to open up its economy regardless of changes in the international environment. "On Ukraine, indeed the current situation there is grave, and China is deeply concerned and grieved," Li said in Mandarin, according to an official translation.
On Monday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said relations with Russia were"rock solid." He pointed to a joint statement with Russia issued after a high-level meeting in early February between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
Asian Stock Market: China, Japan lead the bears on policy moves, Russia-Ukraine angstAsian Stock Market: China, Japan lead the bears on policy moves, Russia-Ukraine angst By anilpanchal7 Asia RiskAppetite China Ukraine CentralBanks
Lire la suite »
Putin nuking Ukraine puts China relationship at risk, former WMD chief saysIf Russia chooses to be the first country in 77 years to use nuclear weapons, it could force China to take a side against Putin.
Lire la suite »
War in Ukraine Needs to Be Understood in Context of New Russia-China AllianceGiven a Sino-Russian alliance so heavily based on fossil fuels, even if Putin doesn’t himself go down thanks to his invasion of Ukraine, both Beijing and Moscow may find themselves whipsawed in the years to come by climate change.
Lire la suite »
China to provide $790,000 in humanitarian aid to UkraineChina announced that it would begin sending humanitarian aid to Ukraine amid Russia's invasion.
Lire la suite »
Breakingviews - China stock tumble is a reminder of deepening riftMarket sensitivity to U.S.-Chinese relations may have slipped from the headlines with attention on Russia, but it hasn’t gone away. A Washington watchdog’s naming on Thursday of the first companies on course for delisting from New York gave the Nasdaq Golden Dragon Index of U.S.-listed Chinese firms its worst day in at least a decade, tumbling 10%.
Lire la suite »