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ChinaDiplomacy

Chinese, Central Asian foreign ministers to meet ahead of leaders’ summit

  • Qin Gang will host China-Central Asia Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Xian to discuss plans for next month’s talks
  • C+C5 summit seen as Beijing-led effort to boost strategic coordination over issues like Ukraine war and Afghanistan crisis

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Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang will meet his Central Asian counterparts in Xian on Thursday. Photo: AP
Xinlu Liang
China’s foreign minister will host his counterparts from five Central Asian countries on Thursday to prepare for a leaders’ summit next month.

Qin Gang will chair the fourth China-Central Asia Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Xian, in the northwestern province of Shaanxi. The ministers will discuss arrangements for the first China plus Central Asian countries (C+C5) heads of state summit, according to the foreign ministry.

“The six parties will exchange views on various arrangements for the summit, China-Central Asia cooperation in various fields and international and regional issues of common concern,” ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told reporters on Tuesday.

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Two explosions rattle Pakistan counterterrorism office, killing at least 13 people

The foreign ministers of Kazakhstan (Murat Nurtleu), Kyrgyzstan (Kulubaev Zheenbek Moldokanovich) and Tajikistan (Sirojiddin Muhriddin) as well as the acting foreign minister of Uzbekistan (Bakhtiyor Saidov) and Turkmenistan’s first deputy minister of foreign affairs (Vepa Hajiyev) would travel to China for the meeting, she said.

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The summit – which was agreed to during the third meeting of the six countries’ foreign ministers in Kazakhstan in June – is widely regarded as a Beijing-led effort to boost strategic coordination with Central Asia over issues such as the Ukraine war and the crisis in Afghanistan.

The foreign ministers’ talks follow the first China-Central Asia Meeting of the Ministers of Economy and Trade on April 18. All sides agreed to “strengthen cooperation on trade and investment, digital economy, green development, transit transport and other fields, and jointly promote regional economic cooperation”, according to a readout from the Chinese commerce ministry.

The summit comes as China doubles down on its Belt and Road Initiative to fill an economic vacuum left by Russia after Western sanctions. Launched in 2013, the trillion-dollar infrastructure plan aims to link dozens of economies in Asia, Europe and Africa into a China-centred trading network. Beijing plans to mark its 10th anniversary with a forum in autumn.
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