Tag: Chinese Communist Party

  • China’s highest-ranking group to visit North Korea since Covid restrictions

    China’s highest-ranking group to visit North Korea since Covid restrictions

    This week, a high-ranking Chinese government group is travelling to North Korea. This delegation is thought to be the most senior from Beijing to pay a visit to Pyongyang since the reclusive nation shut its borders during the Covid-19 outbreak.

    Li Hongzhong, a member of the Chinese Communist Party‘s central policymaking committee and a leader in its rubber-stamp Parliament, will be in charge of leading the group.

    According to a statement from Hu Zhaoming, the spokesperson for the Central Committee’s International Liaison Department, he will take part in festivities commemorating the 70th anniversary of the conclusion of the Korean War.

    Li’s visit comes after an invitation from North Korea, the statement said.

    “The visit will be significant for what it says about Beijing’s support of North Korea as well as Pyongyang’s willingness to relax pandemic-era border restrictions,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.

    North Korea sealed its borders during the coronavirus pandemic, deepening the isolation of a country that is already one of the most cut off places in the world.

    Beijing is Pyongyang’s longtime ally.

    In the fall of 1950, China sent a quarter million troops into the Korean Peninsula, supporting its North Korean ally and pushing back the combined forces of South Korea, the United States and other countries under the United Nations Command.

    More than 180,000 Chinese troops died in the Korean War, or what Beijing calls the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea.

    But Easley noted that South Korea is garnering a much larger show of international support for its armistice anniversary commemorations, with representatives from 22 countries expected to attend.

    The Chinese visit, and the ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the 1953 armistice that ended fighting on the Korean Peninsula, comesamid simmeringtensions between North Korea and South Korea and its US ally.

    Pyongyang has frequently tested missiles banned under United Nations Security Council resolutions, and on several occasions the US and South Korea have deployed military assets like nuclear-capable submarines and bombers.

    North Koreacontinued its torrid pace of missile testing late Monday, when it fired two short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs) from the Pyongyang area into the waters off the east coast of the peninsula, according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).

    The missiles were launched around 11:55 p.m. local time, flying for about five minutes or 400 kilometers (248 miles) before falling into the water, according to the JCS.

    Earlier Monday, US Navy attack submarine USS Annapolis made a port call at Jeju Naval Base on the island off South Korea’s southern coast, according to South Korean Navy spokesperson Jang Do-young.

    The sub was stopping at the island to replenish military supplies while on an operations mission, Jang said.

    The Annapolis’ visit follows the much more provocative arrival of nuclear-capable ballistic missile submarine USS Kentucky at the southern South Korean port of Busan last week.

    North Korea said the visit of the “boomer,” an Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine which can carry up to 20 missiles and 80 nuclear warheads, to Busan crossed a “red line” and said such provocations could produce a drastic response by Pyongyang.

    “I remind the US military of the fact that the ever-increasing visibility of the deployment of the strategic nuclear submarine and other strategic assets may fall under the conditions of the use of nuclear weapons specified in the DPRK law on the nuclear force policy,” a statement from North Korean Defense Minister Kang Sun Nam posted by state media said.

    Relations have been further complicated by the decision of a US soldier to cross the border between North and South Korea last week in the demilitarized zone separating the two nations.

    Pvt Travis King, who was facing disciplinary action and was meant to go back to the US the day before he bolted, is believed to be the first US soldier to cross into North Korea since 1982.

    On Monday, the deputy commander of the United Nations Command (UNC), Gen. Andrew Harrison, said a “conversation has commenced” with North Korea over King.

    Two US officials told CNN that North Korea had acknowledged receiving contact from the UNC, a multinational military force that includes the United States which fought on the side of South Korea during the 1950-53 Korean War.

    But Pyongyang does not seem to be responding to Washington directly.

    The US State Department has not received a response to its messages on King, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said on Monday. He also said it was his understanding that the US military had not received a response.

    On the UNC side, Miller said it was his understanding “that there have been no new communications since last week, communications that happened in the early days,” but that the North Korean government had acknowledged receipt of the message.

    “I’m not aware of any new communications, other than those that happened in the very early hours, early days after he went across the border,” Miller said at a State Department briefing Monday.

    King has not been publicly seen or heard from since he crossed into North Korea last Tuesday, and North Korea has also not said anything about the status or condition of the missing soldier.

    His reasons for crossing the border into one of the world’s most authoritarian places – and a country which the US does not have diplomatic relations with – have so far remained a mystery.

    Easley, the Ewha Womans University professor, said any quick response from Pyongyang on the status of King was unlikely, especially in light of the armistice commemorations.

    “North Korea is unlikely to engage on Travis King’s case until his interrogation and quarantine are complete, and after the Kim regime celebrates its so-called Victory Day,” Easley said.

  • Jiang Zemin: China bids farewell to its former leader

    Former Chinese President Jiang Zemin was honoured with a state memorial service in Beijing.

    Jiang, who took power following the 1989 Tiananmen Square protest crackdown, will be remembered for guiding the country through a decade of burgeoning economic growth and prosperity.

    He oversaw significant events such as China’s admission to the World Trade Organization and the British handover of Hong Kong to the Chinese.

    According to the Chinese Communist Party, he died last Wednesday of leukaemia and multiple organ failures. He was 96.

    President Xi Jinping delivered the eulogy in a near hour-long ceremony in the Great Hall of the People, where he “Comrade Jiang’s” decisive leadership.

    “He had the extraordinary courage to make bold decisions and the great courage to carry out theoretical innovation at critical moments,” he told a packed hall of dignitaries in black suits.

    Mourners obvservce 3 minutes of respect outside Jiang's former home in Yangzhou
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Mourners observed three minutes of silence outside Jiang’s former home in Yangzhou, in Jiangsu province

    Pedestrians and police guards stand to attention for a three-minute silence in Shanghai
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, Some people on Shanghai’s streets also observed the silence. However observers said that life largely went on as normal

    covid workers observe the silence
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Covid testing workers held a silence in Bazhou in China’s western Xinjiang region

    Students at a Hong Kong school at an assembly memorialising Jiang Zemin
    IMAGE SOURCE,EPA Image caption, In Hong Kong, students observed a silence at school assemblies

    Chinese soldiers frogmarch as they carry Jiang Zemin's glass coffin off a place arriving from Shanghai
    IMAGE SOURCE,XINHUA Image caption, Jiang died in Shanghai. On Monday, a plane carrying his glass coffin arrived in Beijing for the formalities

    Chinese leaders pay their final respects to Jiang Zemin at the Chinese PLA General Hospital in Beijing, China on Monday 5/12
    IMAGE SOURCE,XINHUA Image caption, Chinese President Xi Jinping and other party leaders paid their final respects to Jiang in a smaller ceremony at a Beijing hospital on Monday. He was cremated later that day.