Published: 8:17pm, 5 Oct 2024Updated: 8:21pm, 5 Oct 2024
China sided with Russia in a row with the US-led West on Friday as the United Nations Security Council debated accountability for the 2022 explosions on the Nord Stream natural gas pipelines.
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It came as both Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is expected to meet his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin this month, and top diplomat Wang Yi vowed this week to deepen ties with Moscow to counter Western pressure.
Geng Shuang, China’s deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, voiced Beijing’s disappointment over the lack of progress in investigating the Nord Stream pipeline explosions in the Baltic Sea two years ago.
The Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 undersea pipelines carrying natural gas from Russia to Germany were severely damaged on September 26, 2022, seven months after Russia invaded Ukraine.
Echoing Russia’s UN envoy who had requested the council session, Geng called on member nations to “actively communicate and cooperate” with Moscow and avoid double standards or politicising the investigation.
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