EXCLUSIVE | China says it won't join Swiss peace conference on Ukraine

31 May 2024 - 12:10 By Reuters
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Rescuers work a site of a Russian missile attack amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, on May 31 2024.
Rescuers work a site of a Russian missile attack amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, on May 31 2024.
Image: Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in Kyiv/Handout via REUTERS

China will not attend a Ukraine peace conference in Switzerland next month because it does not meet its expectations, which include Russia and Ukraine taking part, the Chinese foreign ministry said on Friday, confirming an exclusive Reuters report.

Switzerland is seeking a broad-based turnout from different parts of the world for the summit in mid-June, which Bern hopes will lay the groundwork for a peace process in Ukraine.

Moscow was not invited and dismisses the talks as meaningless without its participation.

“The arrangements for the meeting still fall far short of China's requests and the expectations of the international community, making it difficult for China to participate,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a routine briefing.

“China has always insisted that an international peace conference be endorsed by Russia and Ukraine, with the equal participation of all parties, and all peace proposals be discussed in a fair and equal manner. Otherwise it will be difficult for it to play a substantive role in restoring peace.”

China briefed some diplomats this week that it had declined the invitation, saying its conditions had not been met, four sources told Reuters earlier.

“We are sorry the Chinese side does not use the opportunity to present its position on the platform of the summit in Switzerland,” a spokesperson for the Ukrainian embassy in Beijing told Reuters.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov suggested on Thursday China could arrange a peace conference in which Russia and Ukraine take part.

During a visit to China this month, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Ukraine may use the Swiss talks to try to get a broader group of countries to back Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's demand for a total Russian withdrawal.

Putin also expressed backing for China's plan for a peaceful settlement of the crisis, saying Beijing had full understanding of what lay behind the crisis.

Russia and China proclaimed a “no limits” relationship days before Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, but Beijing has so far avoided providing weapons and ammunition for Russia's war effort.

Beijing put forward a 12-point paper more than a year ago that set out principles for ending the war but did not get into specifics. More recently, China and Brazil signed a joint statement calling for Russia-Ukraine peace talks last week.

Ukraine in January invited Chinese President Xi Jinping to participate in the planned summit of world leaders in Switzerland. Zelensky this week urged US President Joe Biden to attend but Washington has not confirmed who it will send.

China's ambassador to Switzerland in March said Beijing would consider taking part in the conference. Chinese representatives attended one preparatory meeting for the summit last summer in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

China's special envoy for Eurasian affairs Li Hui has carried out three rounds of shuttle diplomacy between various European and Middle Eastern countries, Ukraine and Russia since the invasion began.

In the latest round this month, Beijing put forward proposals on supporting the exchange of prisoners of war, opposing the use of nuclear and biological weapons and opposing armed attacks on civilian nuclear facilities, according to a Chinese foreign ministry readout.

But several European leaders and the US have repeatedly urged China to do more to curb exports of dual-use items and critical components propping up Russia's industrial defence base, which US secretary of state Antony Blinken has called “the biggest threat to European security since the end of the Cold War”.

China insists its dual-use exports are subject to oversight and it maintains normal trade relations with Russia.

The Russian and Swiss embassies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Switzerland was seeking to persuade more Global South countries, as well as China, to attend the conference.


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