Sunday, January 9, 2022

What Kazakhstan’s Crisis Means For China

 

RFE: What Kazakhstan’s Crisis Means For China 

As an unprecedented wave of protests swept Kazakhstan and spiraled into violent unrest, China remained largely muted about the crisis unfolding in the Central Asian country with which it shares a 1,782 kilometer border, saying it was an internal affair that it hoped would soon stabilize. 

It wasn’t until Kazakh President Qasym-Zhomart Toqaev gave a defiant, menacing speech on January 7 in which he blamed the violence on alleged “terrorists” trained abroad and said security forces were given a shoot to kill order to suppress protests that Beijing finally weighed in, with Chinese President Xi Jinping offering his support for Toqaev’s efforts to put down what Beijing deemed a “color revolution” in Kazakhstan.  

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More News On The Impact That The Kazakhstan’s Crisis Is Having On China  

Xi says China fully supports Kazakh govt -- China Daily  

What does China make of the Kazakhstan unrest? -- Eurasianet  

GT Voice: China needs security coordination with neighboring countries over Kazakhstan -- Global Times 

Beijing Watches Civil Unrest in Kazakhstan With Wary Eye -- WSJ 

China could provide assistance, support to help Kazakhstan restore order, develop economy: analysts -- Global Times  

Unrest in Kazakhstan May Affect Chinese Firms -- NTD  

How will China's economic interests be affected by unrest in Kazakhstan? -- SCMP  

As Kazakhstan models China's brutality, will China model its protests? -- Gordon G. Chang, The Hill

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