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Beijing Winter Olympics 2022
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During a phone call last month, Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, told China’s President Xi Jinping, left, he would attend the Beijing Winter Olympics Games opening ceremony on February 4. But China says a report suggesting Xi asked Putin to refrain from invading Ukraine during the Games attempts to undermine the Olympics. Photo: Tass

‘Sheer fiction’: China denies Xi asked Putin not to invade Ukraine during Beijing Winter Olympics

  • A Bloomberg report quoted an anonymous diplomat saying President Xi Jinping may have asked the Russian leader not to attack Ukraine as China hosted Games
  • But China’s foreign ministry says the ‘smearing and provocation towards Sino-Russian ties’ was a futile attempt to drive a wedge between the neighbours
China on Monday dismissed a report suggesting President Xi Jinping may have asked his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin not to invade Ukraine during the Beijing Winter Olympic Games.
As tension escalates between Moscow and the West amid fears of a Russian invasion of Ukraine, the attitude of Russia’s giant neighbour and close partner has come under scrutiny.
A report by Bloomberg, quoting an anonymous diplomat, said it was possible Xi had asked Putin during their recent call not to invade Ukraine during the Beijing Games.

02:30

US predicts Russia will ‘move in’ on Ukraine as UK and Canada send arms and special forces

US predicts Russia will ‘move in’ on Ukraine as UK and Canada send arms and special forces
During a phone call last month, Putin told Xi he would attend the Games opening ceremony on February 4 in a show of solidarity after the United States, Britain, Canada and Australia announced a diplomatic boycott over human rights in China.

Xi expressed support for his “old friend” Putin during the call in the face of sanctions the West threatens to impose if Russia invades Ukraine. China’s president called for “more joint actions to effectively safeguard security interests” while Putin hailed the bilateral ties as being “at an all-time high, reflecting a high level of strategic mutual trust”.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said on Monday the report was “sheer fiction”.

“This is not only smearing and provocation towards Sino-Russian ties, but also a deliberate attempt to interfere with and undermine the Games,” Zhao said.

China-Russia friendship forged after bridging decades-old differences

Zhao said such efforts attempted to divide Beijing and Moscow.

“I wish to stress that Sino-Russian ties have become mature, stable and resilient nowadays. The two sides have maintained close communication on all levels,” he said.

“Any effort to drive a wedge between China and Russia or to undermine our mutual trust is bound to be futile.”

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