China under pressure
May 28, 2010
KOREAN TENSIONS
China under pressure
All eyes are on Beijing's stand on crisis as PM Wen visits Seoul today
<!-- by line --> By Grace Ng, China Correspondent
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Salvage team members and soldiers watch as they move a part of the sunken naval vessel closer to the shore by use of a giant crane off Baengyeongdo near the maritime border with North Korea. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
BEIJING - CHINESE Premier Wen Jiabao arrives in Seoul today for a visit amid questions on whether Beijing will finally take a stand on North Korea's involvement in the sinking of a South Korean warship. While senior United States officials yesterday reportedly said Beijing has indicated it is prepared to hold Pyongyang responsible for the March 26 torpedo attack, the Chinese side has remained non-committal so far.
When Mr Wen meets South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, he is likely to comfort China's close trading partner with more condolences over the death of 46 sailors in the sinking of the corvette Cheonan. An international investigation last week concluded that Pyongyang was the culprit. In public, Mr Wen is also likely to repeat Beijing's standard response about its position on the crisis: that China does not have first-hand information, but is looking at the information from all sides in a prudent manner.
But behind closed doors at a weekend trilateral summit, where Seoul and Tokyo will likely clamour for Beijing to join them in hauling Pyongyang to the United Nations Security Council, Mr Wen may be more forthcoming about China's diplomatic dilemma. 'Premier Wen will speak in more detailed, concrete terms... about China's reluctance to take sides and why,' said Mr Zhang Liangui, an expert on China-North Korea issues at the Central Party School which trains communist party cadres.
Read the full story in Friday's edition of The Straits Times.
[email protected]
Additional reporting by Lina Miao
May 28, 2010
KOREAN TENSIONS
China under pressure
All eyes are on Beijing's stand on crisis as PM Wen visits Seoul today
<!-- by line --> By Grace Ng, China Correspondent
<!-- end by line -->
<!-- end left side bar -->
Salvage team members and soldiers watch as they move a part of the sunken naval vessel closer to the shore by use of a giant crane off Baengyeongdo near the maritime border with North Korea. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
BEIJING - CHINESE Premier Wen Jiabao arrives in Seoul today for a visit amid questions on whether Beijing will finally take a stand on North Korea's involvement in the sinking of a South Korean warship. While senior United States officials yesterday reportedly said Beijing has indicated it is prepared to hold Pyongyang responsible for the March 26 torpedo attack, the Chinese side has remained non-committal so far.
When Mr Wen meets South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, he is likely to comfort China's close trading partner with more condolences over the death of 46 sailors in the sinking of the corvette Cheonan. An international investigation last week concluded that Pyongyang was the culprit. In public, Mr Wen is also likely to repeat Beijing's standard response about its position on the crisis: that China does not have first-hand information, but is looking at the information from all sides in a prudent manner.
But behind closed doors at a weekend trilateral summit, where Seoul and Tokyo will likely clamour for Beijing to join them in hauling Pyongyang to the United Nations Security Council, Mr Wen may be more forthcoming about China's diplomatic dilemma. 'Premier Wen will speak in more detailed, concrete terms... about China's reluctance to take sides and why,' said Mr Zhang Liangui, an expert on China-North Korea issues at the Central Party School which trains communist party cadres.
Read the full story in Friday's edition of The Straits Times.
[email protected]
Additional reporting by Lina Miao