‘Discriminatory’: Putin blasts Western sanctions against Russia; hints at deeper ties with China ahead of visit
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'Discriminatory': Putin blasts Western sanctions against Russia; hints at deeper ties with China ahead of visit

Russian President Vladimir Putin criticised Western sanctions ahead of his four-day visit to China, warning that trade restrictions and the costs of the Ukraine war have pushed Russiaโ€™s economy into recession, as reported by Reuters. In a written interview with Chinaโ€™s Xinhua news agency on Saturday, Putin said Russia and China were united in rejecting โ€œdiscriminatoryโ€ measures in global trade. Putinโ€™s trip, which the Kremlin described as โ€œunprecedented,โ€ runs from Sunday to Wednesday. He will first attend the two-day Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit in Tianjin, before travelling to Beijing for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and to take part in a military parade marking the end of World War Two in Asia. The visit follows Xiโ€™s May trip to Moscow, where the Chinese leader attended a military parade on Red Square celebrating the 80th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany. It was Xiโ€™s 11th visit to Russia since becoming president. Since Russiaโ€™s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Western nations have imposed multiple rounds of sanctions. US President Donald Trump has also warned of โ€œmassiveโ€ new penalties unless peace talks progress. Putin, however, praised Chinaโ€™s role in shoring up economic ties. โ€œTo sum up, economic cooperation, trade and industrial collaboration between our countries are advancing across multiple areas,โ€ he said. โ€œDuring my upcoming visit, we will certainly discuss further prospects for mutually beneficial cooperation and new steps to intensify it for the benefit of the peoples of Russia and China.โ€ Russia-China trade hit a record $245 billion in 2024, as Beijing increased purchases of Russian oil and expanded goods sales after Western countries cut economic ties with Moscow. โ€œIn recent years, the export of pork and beef to China has been launched. Overall, agricultural and food products occupy a prominent place in Russiaโ€™s exports to China,โ€ Putin noted. He added that transactions were increasingly being conducted in rubles and yuan, and highlighted Russiaโ€™s role as Chinaโ€™s key oil and gas supplier. Putin did not directly address EU accusations that China has been aiding Russiaโ€™s war effort in Ukraineโ€”allegations Beijing has consistently denied. The two leaders declared a โ€œno limitsโ€ partnership in 2022 and have met more than 40 times in the past decade. Putin last visited China in 2024, a year after the International Criminal Court issued a warrant against him for the alleged illegal deportation of Ukrainian children.



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