
Xi Jinping to meet Central Asian leaders as both sides seek ‘stronger coordination'
Chinese President
Xi Jinping is expected to reaffirm Beijing's commitment to
Central Asian ties and higher quality development projects when he visits Kazakhstan for a summit next week.
Xi will be in Astana from Monday to Wednesday for the China-Central Asia Summit, which is expected to focus on areas including transport, energy, security governance and the digital economy, according to analysts.
It follows the
first such summit in the Chinese city of Xian in 2023, when Xi vowed to strengthen trade and investment ties. The resource-rich Central Asian region – where Beijing and Moscow are vying for influence – shares a long border with
Xinjiang , in China's far west.
Zhao Long, an expert on Russian and Central Asian affairs at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, said the summit was likely to see a shift in emphasis from Beijing – from the quantity to quality of projects, and 'particularly how to implement previously agreed projects and deliver tangible results'.
The gathering is being held against the backdrop of Washington's global tariff war, which observers say could create an opportunity for Beijing and Central Asian nations to align their development needs.
'In the face of shared external pressures, both sides are seeking stronger strategic coordination and complementarity of development to mitigate risks caused by US policy fluctuations,' Zhao said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China's nuclear stockpile is growing fast, ICBMs may match US, Russia around 2030: SIPRI
China's nuclear arsenal is growing 'faster than any other country' and its intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) force could potentially match that of Russia or the US by the turn of the decade, a Swedish think tank dedicated to weapons research has said. Advertisement According to the latest yearbook of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), China has added 100 more warheads to its nuclear stockpile each year since 2023. It held at least 600 and that number was expected to 'keep growing over the coming decade', according to a report released on Monday. 'China … has the fastest-growing nuclear arsenal in the world,' the report said. While most of these warheads are thought to be stored separately from their launchers, China could be deploying a small number on missiles, as is done on a much larger scale by the United States and Russia. According to SIPRI's estimate, 132 of the warheads have been assigned to launchers that are still being loaded. Hans Kristensen, an associate senior fellow at SIPRI and director of the Federation of American Scientists' nuclear information project, said there could be several factors behind the rapid warhead build-up, including President Xi Jinping's call that China 'must be a world-class military power by the middle of the century'. Advertisement '[There could have been] an apparent decision that the previous minimum deterrent was insufficient to deter potential adversaries, and possibly a conclusion that increasingly capable US missile defence systems could reduce the effectiveness of the Chinese retaliatory capability,' Kristensen said.


South China Morning Post
10 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Xi Jinping to meet Central Asian leaders as both sides seek ‘stronger coordination'
Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to reaffirm Beijing's commitment to Central Asian ties and higher quality development projects when he visits Kazakhstan for a summit next week. Xi will be in Astana from Monday to Wednesday for the China-Central Asia Summit, which is expected to focus on areas including transport, energy, security governance and the digital economy, according to analysts. It follows the first such summit in the Chinese city of Xian in 2023, when Xi vowed to strengthen trade and investment ties. The resource-rich Central Asian region – where Beijing and Moscow are vying for influence – shares a long border with Xinjiang , in China's far west. Zhao Long, an expert on Russian and Central Asian affairs at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, said the summit was likely to see a shift in emphasis from Beijing – from the quantity to quality of projects, and 'particularly how to implement previously agreed projects and deliver tangible results'. The gathering is being held against the backdrop of Washington's global tariff war, which observers say could create an opportunity for Beijing and Central Asian nations to align their development needs. 'In the face of shared external pressures, both sides are seeking stronger strategic coordination and complementarity of development to mitigate risks caused by US policy fluctuations,' Zhao said.


South China Morning Post
14 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why China's officials are braced for yet another round of inspections to check their work
Chinese officials already have to deal with a series of inspectors knocking on their doors to keep tabs on their activities, but now they will also have a new group of 'performance observers' looking over their shoulders to check that they are not wasting government funds. Local officials in China are often castigated for spending money on 'white elephants' , such as flashy construction projects, in the hope these will provide a quick fix for the local economy and win favour with their supervisors. But in recent years, as local government debts mounted, the central government has been trying to rein in such excesses, with President Xi Jinping saying officials should prioritise quality development over rapid growth. Several provinces have started pilot programmes in recent months, especially after the Communist Party gave its austerity campaign a further push in March in an effort to cut waste and improve administrative efficiency. Local officials already face a raft of inspections, covering areas such as party discipline, their conduct and the environmental impact of their work, but the emergence of the new performance observers may be the result of regional party bodies taking the initiative. Although the central government has called for wasteful spending to be eliminated nationwide, it has not issued a public decree calling for the new inspection teams.