Tough talk comes ahead of Hague
ruling on south china sea
Xi warns China will stand firm in the
face of challenges
Chinese
President Xi Jinping arriving at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing
yesterday.
In
an unusual move, Mr Xi dedicated a significant part of his speech to foreign
policy
during
a party occasion. pHoto: AP
BEIJING — In a speech commemorating the
Chinese Communist Party 95th anniversary, President Xi Jinping said yesterday
that China will never compromise on sovereignty, adding that while Beijing does
not seek to dominate Asia, it will not succumb to military threats.
The ruling party must maintain absolute
power in the country, strengthen its military and enhance its role on the world
stage, Mr. Xi told serried ranks of top officials in Beijing’s Great Hall of
the People, to rapturous applause. “No foreign country ... should expect us to
swallow the bitter pill of harm to our national sovereignty, security or development
interests,” Mr. Xi said.
“We are not afraid of trouble,” he stated
during the televised speech. In an unusual move, Mr. Xi dedicated a significant
part of his speech to foreign policy during a party occasion, ahead of an
international tribunal ruling on overlapping maritime claims between Manila and
Beijing on July 12.
Beijing insists that the Permanent Court of
Arbitration has no jurisdiction over the issue and has boycotted the
proceedings. His remarks come as regional tensions rise over Beijing’s claims
to nearly all of the South China Sea. There are overlapping claims by Brunei,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam in the waterway. The United
States has dispatched several patrols to the South China Sea, ostensibly to
uphold freedom of navigation, drawing Beijing’s ire.
Mr. Xi took an apparent stab at the US,
saying: “We will not show up at other people’s front doors to flex our muscles.
That does not show strength or scare anyone.”
Taking aim at China’s neighbours, many of
whom are alarmed by its growing assertiveness over the South China Sea, the
President said that confrontation should be replaced by cooperation and the
monopoly of international power should be replaced by a win-win mentality. “It
is up to all members of the international community to decide what kind of
international order and governance system is best for the world,” he added.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei
reiterated at a regular press briefing yesterday that more countries were
supportive of Beijing’s position on the South China Sea as it had acted in
accordance with international law and within its sovereign rights. He said
China has also acted as a responsible country in keeping to agreements reached
with the Association of South-east Asian Nations.
Mr. Hong added that the government of former
Filipino president Benigno Aquino had “spun a web of lies” regarding the South
China Sea, and by ignoring China’s declaration that the tribunal has no
jurisdiction over the case, Manila had “openly flouted the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea and unilaterally by force expanded the scope
of the convention”.
Since assuming the party’s top post in
2012, Mr. Xi has rapidly consolidated power while overseeing a more assertive
foreign policy and a tighter authoritarian stance at home.
In his speech, Mr. Xi heaped praise on the
ruling party and vowed to maintain the country’s centralised communist-led
political system.
“All party comrades must remember what we
are constructing is socialism with Chinese characteristics, and not any other
ideology,” he said. The Communist Party, which had some 88.7 million members at
the end of last year, must maintain “absolute leadership”, he said.
Chinese
soldiers posing for photos to mark the Communist Party’s 95th anniversary in
Mohe,
northeast China’s Heilongjiang province, on Thursday.
President Xi’s speech this week said the
party must maintain ‘absolute leadership’.
pHoto: AFP
Challenged by a slowing economy, Mr. Xi has
made increasingly frequent appeals for ideological unity, a throwback approach
that contrasts with recent Chinese leaders who emphasised delivering economic
growth as continued justification for communist rule. Mr. Xi has won popularity
with a much-publicised anti-corruption campaign that has claimed the scalps of
several former top-ranked officials.
“The biggest threat to our ruling party is
corruption,” he said, calling for a “complete purification of the party’s
political environment”.
He credited the Communist Party with
expelling “imperialism” from Chinese soil, and stressed the country’s economic
growth in recent decades. He stressed the need for “Mao Zedong thought” but did
not refer to the tens of millions killed in famines and political campaigns
launched by the founder of the People’s Republic. The speech contained more
than 20 references to “Marxism” and was followed by a rendition of the
left-wing anthem The Internationale by a brass band.
Mr. Xi also issued a warning to Taiwan
President Tsai Ing-wen, saying: “We will resolutely oppose all Taiwanese
separatist forces.” Shortly before the ceremony began, a Taiwanese warship
mistakenly launched a supersonic “aircraft carrier killer” missile towards the
mainland, which landed in the Taiwan Strait, said Taipei’s navy. One was killed
and three were injured.
Mr. Xi vowed to “build, in line with our
global status and in accordance with national interests, a strong army and
consolidate national defence”. He also said China would take an active role in
what he called “global governance”. AGENCIES