Connect with us

World

Xi Jinping to visit Moscow for summit with Putin: Report

Published

on

Xi Jinping to visit Moscow for summit with Putin: Report

Prime diplomat Wang Yi, who’s at the moment in Moscow, has mentioned ties between the 2 nations are ‘rock strong’.

Chinese language chief Xi Jinping is making ready to go to Moscow for a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin within the coming months, in accordance with the Wall Road Journal.

Citing individuals conversant in the plan, the newspaper mentioned on Tuesday that the Xi-Putin summit was a part of a Chinese language effort to play a extra energetic function in bringing the year-old conflict to an finish and a part of a push for multi-party peace talks. China may also use the summit to reiterate calls that nuclear weapons shouldn’t be used, the report added.

Preparations for the journey are at an early stage and the timing has not been finalised, the Journal mentioned, including that Xi’s go to may happen in April or in early Could when Russia celebrates its World Warfare Two victory over Nazi Germany.

China’s prime diplomat Wang Yi is at the moment in Moscow and anticipated to fulfill Russian International Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday.

Advertisement

In a tour of Europe, Wang has stepped up requires a negotiated settlement to finish the conflict in Ukraine, which started on February 24 final 12 months when Russian troops invaded the nation.

Xi and Putin final met in particular person in China forward of the Beijing Winter Olympics final 12 months, days earlier than Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. The 2 males introduced a “no limits” partnership the place no areas of cooperation have been “forbidden”. They’d a video name final December.

Beijing has not condemned Russia’s actions or joined Western-led sanctions in opposition to Moscow but it surely has urged “restraint” and burdened disputes needs to be settled by “peaceable means”.

In the meantime, its relations with the US have deteriorated over points reminiscent of human rights in Hong Kong and China’s far western area of Xinjiang, in addition to the US discovery this month of what it has claimed was a Chinese language “spy balloon” flying over its territory.

In Moscow on Tuesday, Wang once more burdened the 2 nations’ shut ties in a gathering with Nikolai Patrushev, the secretary of Russia’s highly effective Safety Council and an in depth confidant of Putin.

Advertisement

“Chinese language-Russian relations are mature in character: they’re rock strong and can face up to any take a look at in a altering worldwide state of affairs,” Wang instructed Patrushev via a Russian interpreter in remarks aired on Russian state tv.

Patrushev, in the meantime, instructed Wang that Beijing was a prime precedence in Russian overseas coverage and that the 2 nations should stick collectively.

“Within the context of a marketing campaign that’s being waged by the collective West to include each Russia and China, the additional deepening of Russian-Chinese language cooperation and interplay within the worldwide enviornment is of specific significance,” Patrushev was quoted as saying by state media outlet RIA.

Wang is anticipated to debate Xi’s journey whereas he’s in Moscow, the Wall Road Journal mentioned.

The Kremlin has hinted Wang may additionally meet Putin.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Germany's right wing poised for major wins as centrist parties stumble

Published

on

Germany's right wing poised for major wins as centrist parties stumble

Germany’s right wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is expected to win its first election since the party was formed in 2013, as anti-mass immigration sentiment sends voters to the polls.

Exit polls on Sunday showed AfD securing a winning 33.5% share of the vote in Thuringia and 31.5% in Saxony. Meanwhile, the center-left Social Democratic Party – to which Chancellor Olaf Scholz belongs – brought in less than 8% of the vote in both states, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The election follows a wider trend of success for conservative groups across Europe in recent months. French Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron’s government narrowly quashed a conservative takeover of the French parliament earlier this year.

Analysts say the ultimate impact that AfD and other party politicians can have will be determined by how willing centrists are to work with them.

GERMAN RIGHT WING CANDIDATE STABBED IN LATEST ATTACK AHEAD OF ELECTIONS

Advertisement

DRESDEN, GERMANY – AUGUST 29: A skinhead supporter of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) political party waves a German flag while taunting leftist, anti-fascist protesters following the final AfD Saxony election rally prior to state elections on August 29, 2024, in Dresden, Germany. The AfD is currently leading in polls in both Saxony and Thuringia ahead of state elections scheduled for Sunday in both states. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

“The center-right will decide to what extent an AfD win would be a turning point: So far, they have been relatively consistent in excluding cooperation — more so than in other Western European countries,” Manès Weisskircher, a political scientist at the Dresden University of Technology, told the Journal.

The German elections this weekend come just days after a Syrian immigrant killed three people in a stabbing spree in Solingen, Germany. ISIS claimed responsibility for the terrorist attack shortly after.

Emergency services and police at a stabbing scene in Germany Friday

Emergency services and police are deployed near the scene where three people were killed and injured in an attack at a festival in Solingen, western Germany, the German dpa news agency reported, Friday, Aug. 23, 2024.  (Gianni Gattus/dpa via AP)

Federal prosecutors in Germany identified the suspect as Issa Al H., omitting his family name because of German privacy laws.

GERMAN TERROR ATTACK SUSPECT IDENTIFIED AS A SYRIAN REFUGEE, CHANCELLOR VOWS TO IMPLEMENT STRICT IMMIGRATION

Advertisement

ISIS said the attacker targeted Christians “to avenge Muslims in Palestine and everywhere.”

Der Spiegel magazine, citing unidentified security sources, said that the suspect had moved to Germany late in 2022, and sought asylum.

Scholz gives speech in Berlin

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is facing a surge in right-wing sentiment across Germany. (John MacDougall/AFP via Getty Images)

Similar attacks by Muslim migrants across Europe have spurred anti-immigration sentiment. Even the left-leaning Scholz called for strengthening immigration laws and ramping up deportations in the wake of the attack.

 

“We will have to do everything we can to ensure that those who cannot and are not allowed to stay in Germany are repatriated and deported,” Scholz said while visiting the sight where the stabbing happened.

Advertisement

“This was terrorism, terrorism against us all,” he said.

Fox News’ Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this report

Advertisement
Continue Reading

World

Seven EU members hadn’t received any post-Covid funding by end-2023

Published

on

Seven EU members hadn’t received any post-Covid funding by end-2023

Continued delays are jeopardising the EU’s €724bn post-Covid recovery fund, warns a new report by the European Court of Auditors (ECA).

ADVERTISEMENT

Three years after creating a huge fund to stimulate post-pandemic recovery, EU member states have used under a third of the €724bn in grants and loans, EU auditors said in a report published today (2 September). 

By the end of 2023, Belgium, Finland, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden had not received any post-Covid money at all, the EU Court of Auditors said.  

Almost all member states have experienced delays in submitting payment requests, whether due to political turmoil, uncertainty over the rules, or national administrative capacity, the report said.  

The Netherlands and Hungary did not sign operational agreements, the first step required to access EU funds, while Sweden did not submit a payment application, it added – while others such as the Netherlands were held back by protracted coalition negotiations.  

“For the Recovery and Resilience Plan you really need political consensus and support and that the government stands behind the plan, and the Netherlands was waiting for that stability,” Ivana Maletić, senior auditor at the Luxembourg-based EU agency, told Euronews in an interview. 

Advertisement

In the more complex case of Hungary, Viktor Orbán’s government has to meet 27 milestones intended to fight corruption and safeguard judicial independence, which he hasn’t yet done.  

The other four countries — Belgium, Finland, Ireland and Poland — submitted payment requests later than others, so they were still being assessed by the European Commission, which directly manages and implements the fund, at the end of 2023.   

One quarter not completed on time

Unlike cohesion funds, the normal vehicle for EU regional spending, post-pandemic financial support is tied to progress on meeting commitments, and member states are behind schedule in meeting these targets and absorbing funds.  

“Timely absorption of the RRF is essential: it helps to avoid bottlenecks in carrying out the measures towards the end of the Facility’s lifespan, and reduces the risk of inefficient and erroneous spending,” said Maletić, who led the audit. 

Halfway through the six-year implementation plan for the post-pandemic funds, 24% of the planned reforms and investments have not been completed on time — meaning that a significant number of the trickiest promises have yet to be fulfilled, the ECA found. 

Advertisement

With the RRF due to expire in August 2026 and no extension expected, EU auditors are recommending the Commission provide further support to strengthen how similar funds are designed in future.  

“It can happen that for some actions, member states receive substantial amounts of funds without finalising them at all because it will not be possible to finalise them within the given time,” a senior auditor told a press conference on Monday (2 September) — though Brussels then doesn’t have the power to claw back money.  

The EU executive however rejected auditors’ recommendations to stop funding incomplete actions and recover transfers. 

“The Commission does not consider that payments based on progress is a risk and has no legal basis to recover funds already disbursed in relation to milestones and targets already and still fulfilled,” said its response. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

World

Analysis-Apple Set for Music, TV Streaming Fight in India After Airtel Deal

Published

on

Analysis-Apple Set for Music, TV Streaming Fight in India After Airtel Deal
By Munsif Vengattil and Aditya Kalra NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Apple’s partnership with India’s second-biggest telecoms firm will give the iPhone maker a sorely needed boost in a content market where it lags far behind the likes of Spotify and Walt Disney. The U.S. technology giant, working to boost …
Continue Reading

Trending