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Putin heads to China as Ukraine sinks ties with West
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) May 18, 2014


Japan, China ministers hold first meeting since war shrine trip
Tokyo (AFP) May 17, 2014 - The Japanese and Chinese trade ministers held talks Saturday in the first high-level meeting between the two countries since a visit by Japan's premier to a controversial war shrine sparked a furious diplomatic row in December.

Toshimitsu Motegi and his Chinese counterpart Gao Hucheng agreed to put political tensions to one side to boost bilateral economic ties, when they met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum in Qingdao, Kyodo news agency reported.

It was the first Cabinet-level meeting since hawkish Japanese premier Shinzo Abe's visit to Yasukuni Shrine on December 26 provoked outrage in Beijing, inflaming diplomatic tensions already running high over a bitter territorial dispute.

China, along with other Asian nations, regards the shrine as a symbol of what it says is Japan's unwillingness to repent for its aggressive warring last century.

"Although Japan and China have difficult issues, we agreed that we should proceed with cooperation between the two countries based on our mutually beneficial and strategic relationship," Motegi was quoted by Japanese state broadcaster NHK as saying following the meeting in the Chinese port city.

The talks, which lasted about 20 minutes, were held in a "very good atmosphere", Motegi told reporters.

Relations between the Asian giants plunged to their lowest in years in September 2012 after Japan nationalised part of a South China Sea island chain known as the Senkakus in Japan and the Diaoyus in China.

Tokyo controls the islands, which are strategically sited and may harbour mineral resources, but Beijing claims sovereignty.

Paramilitary vessels from both sides have shadow-boxed in waters around the islands since then, with some observers warning of the risk of a limited military confrontation that could have disastrous regional implications.

However, in recent months the temperature has cooled and there have been signs that the two sides, who are economically interdependent, are moving towards a diplomatic detente.

Russian President Vladimir Putin heads to China on Tuesday to shore up eastern ties as relations with the West plunge to new lows over the Ukraine crisis.

During a two-day visit to Shanghai, Putin and Chinese host Xi Jinping will seek to clinch a raft of agreements including a landmark gas deal crucial for Moscow as Europe seeks to cut reliance on Russian oil and gas.

The two leaders will also take part in a regional security forum and oversee the start of joint naval exercises off Shanghai in the East China Sea.

Moscow's relations with the United States and European Union have dived to a post-Cold War low in recent months over Russia's seizure of Crimea and Western accusations the Kremlin is fomenting unrest in the east of Ukraine.

The West has slapped sanctions on some of Putin's closest allies and threatened broader punitive measures if Moscow disrupts presidential polls in Ukraine on May 25.

Amid the showdown the China trip -- previously billed as a visit with a heavy focus on energy ties -- has acquired new symbolism, analysts said.

"In the face of sanctions, Russia needs to demonstrate that it is not isolated," said Pyotr Topychkanov, an analyst with the Carnegie Moscow Centre. "This will be the goal of Putin's visit. He wants to show that Russia has allies."

Putin will be joined by a delegation including dozens of business tycoons and regional leaders and will oversee the signing of some 30 agreements, his top foreign adviser Yury Ushakov said.

In recent years Russia and China, both veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council, have sought to strengthen ties and often worked in lockstep to contain Washington.

Xi made Russia his first foreign destination after taking office last year and attended the Sochi Olympics in March.

The crisis in Ukraine has thrown up a hurdle however, with Beijing struggling to support Moscow while maintaining its stance on "non-interference" in other countries' domestic affairs.

- Decade of gas talks -

In the run-up to the visit, officials have sought to wrap up a decade of talks on a huge deal that could eventually see almost 70 billion cubic metres of Russian gas sent to China annually for the next 30 years.

Less than a week before the visit officials said differences over pricing remained.

Analysts said China may be using Russia's growing isolation from Western markets as a bargaining chip to negotiate a lower price.

Beijing has denied that but the Kremlin's Ushakov conceded the crisis in ties with the West was affecting the talks to "some extent".

Russian natural gas giant Gazprom said on Thursday the negotiations were "in the final stages," lifting hopes that Putin and Xi will oversee the signing of the mega-deal.

Analysts say the world's second-largest economy has a variety of potential suppliers to choose from but its leverage is limited by China's growing need for additional gas.

"Boosting gas exports to Asia will make Gazprom less reliant on revenues from exports to Europe, potentially making Russia's foreign policy more intransigent on Ukraine or other matters," the IHS consultancy said in a comment.

Ahead of the visit, Russian state oil firm Rosneft also held talks with Chinese oil refiner Sinopec with a view to signing a contract.

In 2013, the two firms signed a preliminary agreement that could see Russia send up to 100 million tonnes of oil to China over 10 years.

Among other key deals, the two countries will agree to develop oil and coal deposits, the Kremlin said.

China could agree to buy some 100 Sukhoi-Superjet planes, said Sergei Luzyanin, deputy director of the Far Eastern Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Russia could also sign a preliminary agreement enabling it to use China's payment card network UnionPay, Luzyanin said.

In March, Putin said Russia would create the country's own credit card system after several local banks saw their customers barred from using Visa and MasterCard cards as a result of US sanctions.

On Wednesday, Putin will take part in a regional security summit, dubbed the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia.

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