Chinese warned against Kyrgyzstan travel By Qin Jize (China Daily) Updated: 2005-03-30 00:12 China's Foreign Ministry has advised
against travelling to Kyrgyzstan after 10 Chinese nationals were injured during
last week's violent uprising.
Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Liu Jianchao. [fmprc.gov.cn] | Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said three were seriously injured and
had been taken to local hospital and the economic loss has reached US$7 million.
Liu told a weekly news briefing the Chinese Embassy in Kyrgyzstan has
demanded the Kyrgyzstan side to take effective measures to protect the property
and personal safety of Chinese citizens and institutions in the country.
Liu said the civil air service between China and Kyrgyzstan is back to normal
and those who want to evacuate will have no difficulties at present.
Liu said the 10 Chinese were injured during looting but there is no evidence
to suggest they have been targeted because of their race or nationality.
China's border post with Kyrgyzstan in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region reopened Monday after a six-day closure amid the current
political crisis in the country.
The closure temporarily stranded more than 100 Kyrgyz business people on the
Chinese side of the 1,000-kilometer-long border, Xinhua said.
Japan rebuke
China rejected the concerns expressed by Japan about the increase in
Chinese military spending, saying is was "very shocked" by the comments.
Liu argued that Japan's defence budget for fiscal year of 2004 was about
US$41.5 billion, compared with China's US$25.6 billion.
"Japan has less land and a smaller population but its military expenditure is
1.62 times more than China," Liu said.
Liu said he hopes Japan will "take an objective position concerning this
issue."
There are reports that a study made by the Japanese National Institute for
Defence Studies warned that the military balance in East Asia was becoming
"increasingly uncertain" due to an arms build up by China.
Double standards
China is strongly opposed to a report issued by the US State
Department on Monday, which has again stigmatized the human rights situation in
China, Liu said.
"The Chinese Government aims toserve its people and has made tremendous
efforts in the fields of protecting human rights, expending democracy and
enforcing the rule of law," he said.
Liu said the US State Department should have been fully aware of the
achievements made by the Chinese Government and its people in the field of human
rights protection.
He urged the US to stop intervening in the domestic affairs of other
countries using the excuse of human rights and to "pay more attention to its own
human rights situation."
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