SLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -- China will offer its close ally Pakistan a low-interest $500 million (315 million euro) loan to help ease its growing financial problems, Pakistan's
foreign minister said.
Shah Mehmood Qureshi made the announcement Thursday after a recent visit to China and after Pakistan hosted a protest-free, security-heavy leg of the Olympic torch relay amid
Western criticism of its giant neighbor's human rights record in Tibet. Qureshi, who accompanied President Pervez Musharraf on the April 10-15 trip, said that it had been "highly
successful." "If we have any reliable friend, my experience says it is China," Qureshi said at a news conference in the capital, Islamabad.
Qureshi is a loyalist of slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, whose party defeated Musharraf's political supporters in February elections and now leads a new coalition
government. The government has inherited an ailing economy. It faces yawning budget and balance of payments deficits driven by rising world prices for commodities such as oil.
The World Bank last month urged the new administration to take urgent action or risk a crisis, even though the economy was still growing at an annual rate of more than 6 percent.
On Thursday, Qureshi said that Pakistan faces "huge economic problems" but that he hoped the government would overcome them. He said that trade between Pakistan and China
was worth $6.8 billion (4.28 billion euros), and that he hoped that it would reach $15 billion (9.45 billion euros) by 2011.
The two countries' alliance goes back decades, and China is a leading source of investment and arms supplies for Pakistan. They are also rivals of India, which neighbors both.
If what Tingbudong says is true ( I assume it is ) the short answer to internal strife could be to blame the west for all of their problems. It doesn't have to be true to be effective.
E.R. Campbell said:There's an additional factor: it is not clear to me that Tibet is repressed or exploited.
Caveat lector: I have not been to Tibet and I'm unlikely to get here before 2010, at the earliest.
But: I have met a few Tibetans, in China, who were quite emphatic in their distaste for any return to some sort to Buddhist theocracy. The last one (1912-1950) is, I think geneally regarded as having been corrupt and inept. The CCP does not provide much in the way of good government for anyone anywhere but it appears to be 'better' than what the Dalia Lama and his cronies have on offer.
Finally: I cannot find any good case that Tibet is not an integral part of China. It's few and brief periods of independence do not, in my view, offset its long history as a Chines province or client.
Ah yes, the voice of appeasement,the same voices that say we should
not complain too much about the actions of Muslin terrorists as it
may upset them and perhaps drive the price of oil up even further.
CougarDaddy said:I'm just curious though- were these Tibetans whom you met ones who actually had lived in Tibet before and were now living in a different province or Tibetans/Xizang ren who had spent all their lives outside of Tibet? Perhaps their older relatives who remember the initial PRC invasion in 1949-50, IIRC, and the failed 1959 uprising may have a different opinion from their younger generations.
The issue of self-determination is a messy one and has been a messy one since the Pan-Slavism of the 1800s, Wilsonian self-determination that saw the end of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the end of World War One and then with the waves of decolonization after World War II that saw the Western Allies give up most of their overseas empires.
If one takes a relativist definition of it, a Tibetan exile or sympathizer will then ask you if Tibetan self-determination is any less valid than that of the Kosovars or the East Timorese?
Then take an absolutist definition of self-determination and a Chinese ultra-nationalist will accuse you of trying to incite instability where none is needed, and they will often ask how come you are meddling into their affairs when "you Westerners/Lao Wai" are indifferent about the Kurds in Northern Iraq or various seperatist movements that have cropped up all through the history of the United States. :
tomahawk6 said:China has its own agenda and is pursuing it. Many countries that should know better are willing to turn a blind eye to China saying that to do otherwise means war. China has its pressure points and we shouldnt be afraid to apply pressure to get them to moderate their aggressive policies.
China has its pressure points and we shouldnt be afraid to apply pressure to get them to moderate their aggressive policies.
tomahawk6 said:We have Chinese and North Korean troops patroling the streets in Zimbabwe. They are a long way from home dont you think ?
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (CNN) -- A Chinese ship loaded with arms and ammunition sailed away from a South African waters and is on its way to Luanda, Angola to unload its cargo bound for Zimbabwe.
South Africa's High Court ruled Friday the cargo could be offloaded in the Durban port, but it could not pass over South Africa roads to get to Zimbabwe, a country in crisis because of an election stalemate.
Durban's dockworkers also said they would not handle the cargo, fearing the arms would be used by the Zimbabwean government against its own people.
A South African government source told CNN the China-flagged An Yue Jiang had sailed away from Durban Friday evening before the High Court's order could be served to the ship's captain.
The ship was headed to the port of Luanda, Angola, according to the South African Department of Transport.
Zimbabwe is in turmoil after elections last month that saw the opposition Movement for Change party win a majority of seats in the parliament, although Mugabe's ZANU-PF party has contested 16 seats, claiming the MDC cheated.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission began a recount of 23 of those districts Saturday morning.
The presidential election, however, has sparked much more concern. The government of President Robert Mugabe, who has been in power since Zimbabwe won its independence in 1980, has refused to release results of that vote before a recount.
The MDC says its candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, won the election, but ZANU-PF has claimed the MDC engaged in election tampering. The delay in releasing the vote sparked violence and a government crackdown on opposition members.
"This union has a proud history of taking action against regimes which it disapproves of in the past, but this is certainly the first time it has gotten involved in an African regime like Zimbabwe," David Cockroft, general secretary of the International Transport Workers Federation, said.
"I don't think there's much doubt that the (dock) workers ... are very strongly against the Mugabe regime," he said.
Cockroft said that arms had almost certainly been shipped to Zimbabwe through Durban in the past, but the size of this shipment -- "more than a million pounds" and 3.5 million rounds of rifles, small arms, mortar shells and rocket-propelled grenades -- made it more noteworthy.
Earlier, South African Revenue Service spokesman Adrian Lackay told CNN "that it is commonplace for landlocked neighboring states in southern Africa to use South African ports of entry for the transshipment of goods."
Lackay indicated that the ship had complied with South African regulations requiring it to disclose the contents of the cargo it is carrying.
A government spokesman, Thembo Maseko, told CNN, "There were arms on the ship."
The Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a statement in a fax to the Reuters news agency saying that China and Zimbabwe have normal trade relations, that the Chinese government takes a "prudent and responsible" position on arms deals and that it does not involve itself in the internal affairs of other countries.
CNN's Nkepile Mabuse and Bridget Fallon contributed to this report.
China has its own agenda and is pursuing it. Many countries that should know better are willing to turn a blind eye to China saying that to do otherwise means war. China has its pressure points and we shouldnt be afraid to apply pressure to get them to moderate their aggressive policies.
tomahawk6 said:The US is going to add a Marine guard to the unofficial embassy in Taipei.
SeaKingTacco said:But that is precisely my point- understand the effects of your pressure. It is not about giving the Chinese a free pass- it is about boycotting an Olympics over Tibet, which, IMHO is likely to do little but needlessly enrage the uber-nationalist Chinese public, which will be the opposite of moderating Chinese policy. Better, IMHO, to go to Olympics and beat their ass on home turf.
Better still- you don't like Chinese foreign and domestic policy- stop buying their crap. That will apply pressure very nicely, should enough people do it.
My two Yuan...
Ship bound for Zimbabwe may return home, says Chinese official
(CNN) -- A Chinese ship that was blocked from unloading its cargo in South Africa may return to China because of difficulties at African ports, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said Tuesday.
The ship, which is suspected to be carrying weapons destined for Zimbabwe, left South African waters Friday after that country's High Court ruled that the cargo could not be transported over South African roadways to landlocked Zimbabwe -- where violence continues in a dispute over election results.
It was last believed to be headed toward Angola, South African officials said.
The United States has asked that other southern African countries not allow the ship to dock, a senior U.S. administration official in Washington said Tuesday.
Deputy U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey told CNN the United States has been "tracking this vessel for a few days now and we don't think it is appropriate for anyone to provide additional weapons in Zimbabwe as they are going through a political crisis."
The United States has contacted South Africa and Mozambique, as well as China, regarding the ship's movements, Casey added.
The United States is "pleased no country in the region has allowed the vessel to offload" its cargo of weapons, Casey said.
Jiang, speaking in Beijing, said it's up to the shipping company to determine if the An Yue Jiang would return to China.
After Friday's High Court ruling in South Africa, dockworkers in the port of Durban said they would not handle the cargo, fearing the arms would be used by the Zimbabwean government against its own people.
The ship sailed away from the port even before the court's order was delivered to the captain, a South African government source told CNN.
The ship was headed for the port of Luanda, Angola, according to the South African Department of Transport, but it is unclear if it has reached that destination.
Another U.S. administration official said the ship's cargo -- which they said includes small arms, rifles and ammunition -- was bound for Zimbabwe's security forces. The official did not want to be identified because the situation is ongoing.
It's "the kind of stuff the police and military would hold," the official explained.
The best case scenario would be for the Chinese to recall the ship, the official added.
Zimbabwe is landlocked and must use the ports of neighboring countries to unload shipments for transit.
The ship also tried to dock in Mozambique but was refused permission, the official said.
China is a major small arms supplier for several countries, but the U.S. official said "the timing of this arms shipment is important" given the instability in Zimbabwe, where tensions are high over the current government's refusal to release the results from last month's presidential elections.
The government of incumbent President Robert Mugabe, who has been in power since Zimbabwe won its independence in 1980, has refused to release the results of that vote before a recount.
The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) says its candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai, won the election, but the ruling party ZANU-PF claims the MDC engaged in election tampering.
The delay in releasing the results of the vote sparked violence and a government crackdown on opposition members.
In an interview last week with CNN, Tsvangirai said he was concerned about the Chinese ship and feared that the weapons could be used to intimidate voters.
CNN's Wen-chun Fan in Beijing and Zain Verjee in Washington contributed to this report