Putin: Cooperation with China at ‘unprecedented level’

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Chinese President Xi Jinping review an honor guard during a welcome ceremony outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Russia has increasingly turned to China as a market for its energy exports and a source of investment in infrastructure projects. (AP)
Updated 08 June 2018
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Putin: Cooperation with China at ‘unprecedented level’

BEIJING: Cooperation between Russia and China is at an all-time high, Russian President Vladmir Putin told his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, in a meeting Friday ahead of a summit featuring their two countries and six Asian states.
“Cooperation with China is one of Russia’s top priorities and it has reached an unprecedented level,” Putin said.
Russia and China have responded to the US national security strategy describing them as America’s top adversaries by vowing to further expand their economic, political and military cooperation.
They have also sought to strengthen the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a regional grouping they created, which meets this weekend.
Further underlining the relationship’s importance, the visit comes just a month since Putin began his new term in office. He and Xi have met 25 times — five times last year alone, according to Putin’s foreign affairs adviser, Yuri Ushakov.
Following a formal welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in central Beijing, Putin first with Premier Li Keqiang, telling him that Russia-China trade and economic ties have “gained a good tempo, and we are looking for new spheres of cooperation.”
Li said bilateral trade is expected to reach $100 billion this year and voiced a readiness to expand cooperation in both traditional and new spheres, including nuclear energy.
Bilateral trade shrank from nearly $100 billion in 2014 to some $60 billion the following year due to a sharp depreciation of the Russian currency. It has since partly recovered as the ruble has strengthened, reaching nearly $90 billion last year.
Russia has also increasingly turned to China as a market for its energy exports and a source of investment in infrastructure projects.


Somalia warns millions face acute hunger due to drought

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Somalia warns millions face acute hunger due to drought

MOGADISHU: About 6.5 million people in Somalia ‌face acute hunger due to drought, the government and the United Nations said on Tuesday, sounding the alarm days after the UN’s food agency warned ​that food aid could grind to a halt by April without new funding.
Somalia declared a national drought emergency in November after years of failed rains, and other countries in the region have also been hit.
More than a third of those facing acute malnutrition are children, Somalia’s government and the United Nations Somalia said in a joint statement. The crisis has forced tens of thousands of ‌people to ‌flee their homes, with many crowding ​into camps ‌in ⁠Mogadishu and ​other ⁠cities.
“The drought ... has deepened alarmingly, with soaring water prices, limited food supplies, dying livestock, and very little humanitarian funding,” George Conway, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, said in a statement.
Hawo Abdi said she lost two children to illness after the drought laid waste to her homeland in Somalia’s Bay region.
“When I saw that the suffering ⁠was getting worse, I fled my home and ‌came to ... Mogadishu,” she told Reuters ‌from her shelter on the outskirts of ​the capital.
Last week, the UN ‌World Food Programme put the number of those facing acute hunger ‌at 4.4 million, and said it had already cut back its assistance to just over 600,000 people from 2.2 million earlier this year.
It was not clear whether the new figure reflected a sharp increase in those ‌at risk or different counting methods.
The government and United Nations figures tally with those also released on ⁠Tuesday by ⁠the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), which sets the global standard for determining the severity of a food crisis.
While rainfall in the April to June season could offer some relief, some 5.5 million people were expected to remain in the crisis level or worse, with 1.6 million people in the emergency level, the statement said.
Abdiyo Ali was forced to abandon her farm in the Lower Shabelle region.
“Our farms were destroyed, our livestock died, and water sources became too far away. We have nothing left to bring ​with us,” Ali told Reuters ​last week while preparing her food in a displaced people’s camp outside Mogadishu.