US, Britain and India remain silent about death of Jiang Zemin

Jiang’s “tenure will be remembered for China’s economic prosperity and stability”, Abushahab said. “China, under his leadership, galvanised international efforts to promote global development and uphold the rights of women by hosting the Beijing conference in 1995.”

Reflecting the closer relationship between Moscow and Beijing, characterised as a “no limits” partnership shortly before Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Russian Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya drew a comparison between Jiang’s reign and contemporary China.

Jiang “was an outstanding statesman and China’s latest period of new history is intricately linked with his [rule], which was marked by major accomplishments and economic and social development as well as strengthening in [China’s] international standing”, Nebenzya said.

The Russian ambassador to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, called Jiang “an outstanding statesman”. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

The Russian ambassador to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, called Jiang “an outstanding statesman”. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

Ambassadors Fergal Mythen of Ireland, Ferit Hoxha of Albania and Norway’s Meena Syed also prefaced their remarks with condolences.

As was the case with India and Britain, US Ambassador Robert Wood launched immediately into his delegation’s reasons for supporting the resolution under discussion.

As of late Wednesday afternoon, the US State Department had not issued any official statement about Jiang’s death, nor had Delhi or London. The State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

The three nations’ silence contrasted with the EU, where European Council President Charles Michel tweeted his “sincere condolences”.

Michel, who is due to arrive in Beijing on Thursday for meetings with China’s top leadership, including President Xi Jinping, has come under criticism from some of his bloc’s lawmakers for making the trip.

Caught between Washington’s efforts to form a united front with the EU to counter Beijing’s global influence and European companies heavily invested in China, Michel has responded to the criticism by vowing to bring up alleged human rights violations in his meetings with Xi.

Speaking to reporters after a meeting with Nato allies in Bucharest, Romania, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington was “working to increase Nato’s resilience for the future as it faces new challenges, including those posed by China”.

He also referred to a Nato meeting in June during which the members said Beijing was a “systemic challenge to Euro-Atlantic security”.

“The members of our alliance remain concerned by [China’s] coercive policies, by its use of disinformation, by its rapid, opaque military build‑up, including its cooperation with Russia,” Blinken said in Bucharest.

Also expressing condolences over Jiang’s death was Pakistan, a key regional ally of China’s, with Prime Minister Shebaz Sharif calling him “a wise leader and a statesman”.

Not only has India remained silent on Jiang, but the country’s tensions with Beijing rose on Wednesday over joint US-India military exercises in the disputed region close to China. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian raised the topic during a regular press briefing in Beijing.

“The joint military exercise held by India and the US near the Line of Actual Control violated the spirit of relevant agreements signed by China and India in 1993 and 1996, and does not help build bilateral trust,” he said.

South China Morning Post

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