Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 13 – Chinese officials
have announced plans to extend their transportation network into the Russian
Far East, something they say is part of the Eurasian Economic Union but that
many Russians are likely to view as the latest example of Chinese
neo-colonialism on Russian lands.
Officials from China’s Heilongjiang
province outlined their plans at a meeting of the second Russian-Chinese Expo
in Harbin. Initially, it will involve
the construction of three bridges from China to Russia, a high-speed rail line
between Harbin and Vladivostok, and the integration of the Chinese and Russian
roads (gudok.ru/news/infrastructure/?ID=1310980).
Eventually, Chinese officials said
yesterday that this “international transportation net” would be connected with
Korean and Japanese ports and also with Mongolia networks. This will “make
possible the development both of the northeast of the Chinese Peoples Republic
and also the Russian Far East.
This will clearly be a Chinese
project rather than a joint one. China is currently building more kilometers of
rail lines every three days than Russia is building in a year, and the
population of Heilongjiang province is more than twice that of all of the
Russian Federation east of the Urals.
Coming on the heels of Moscow’s
agreement to give Chinese firms special rights in the region and efforts by
Russian regions to lease enormous territories to China on a long-term basis,
this latest Chinese plan will certainly reorient much of the Russian Far East
toward China and spark new worries among some Russians about the future of that
area.
No comments:
Post a Comment