Beijing Tells Chinese Business People to Fill Void in Russian Market Amid Ukraine Crisis
Beijing Tells Chinese Business People to Fill Void in Russian Market Amid Ukraine Crisis

By Rita Li

China’s Ambassador to Russia called on Chinese business people in Moscow to grow their enterprises by leveraging the Ukraine crisis. It came as severe international sanctions have crippled Russia’s economy in the wake of the invasion.

Ambassador Zhang Hanhui urged Chinese businessmen in Moscow to make good use of the current Russia-Ukraine war as he met with representatives earlier this week. According to a March 21 social media post by the Russian Confucius Culture Promotion Association, the ambassador told business heads to waste no time and “fill the void” in the Russian economy.

“The current international situation is complex. Big enterprises are facing great challenges or even disruptions in payment and supply chains,” he said at the meeting, according to the post.

The conference summary made no mention of the Western sanctions, yet Zhang said it was the right time for the private, and small-and-medium-sized enterprises to make a difference.

In response to a question about the ambassador’s remarks, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said during a daily briefing in Beijing on March 22 that the two sides have long been in “normal economic and trade cooperation,” without mentioning the meeting in Moscow.

In a bid to force an end to the Ukraine crisis, the West has pushed to isolate Russia from the global economic and financial system, including cutting off a number of Russian banks from SWIFT, the main international payment system.

Yet concerns remain that China would aid the sanction-slammed Russian economy.

Despite seeking to portray a neutral stance amid the conflict between Russia and the West, Beijing is widely viewed as tacitly supporting Moscow, and has vowed to trade with Russia as normal. Russian banks have switched to China’s state-owned UnionPay as an alternative to Visa and Mastercard, which announced their suspension of credit card services to Russian banks in early March.

Analysts at research firm Gavekal Dragonomics, however, said earlier this month that China will not ride to its rescue. “Even though China’s government probably wishes to assist Russia, it cannot shield its companies from the potentially crippling punishments for violating sanctions.”

“Most large institutions in China are not willing to take the risk of falling afoul of U.S. sanctions,” Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Washington-based think tank Peterson Institute for International Economics, told The Washington Post.

“And so any sanction busting is likely to be done by smaller institutions that have less to lose,” he said.

The Epoch Times reached out to the Chinese embassy in Moscow and Russia Confucius Culture Promotion Association and did not receive a response by press time.

Avaaz members, demonstrators, and Ukrainian activists stand in front of signs reading “Stop Putin’s oil” during a vigil for Ukraine near the European Union headquarters in Brussels on March 22, 2022. (Valeria Mongelli/AFP via Getty Images)

The United States and many European Union countries have imposed unprecedented sanctions on Russia, including a ban on Russian oil and gas by Washington, which could further boost Russian energy giants’ presence in China. Beijing had also announced a lifting of import restrictions on Russia’s wheat hours after Moscow launched the war in Ukraine on Feb. 24.

In a two-hour video call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on March 18, President Joe Biden warned Beijing of unspecified “implications and consequences” if it were to provide material support to Russia.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a March 7 press briefing that Moscow can’t backfill the impact of Western sanctions by relying on China. “It’s just not possible,” she said, adding that “we’ve also seen China abide by the sanctions that have been put in place.”

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