Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday said Moscow and Beijing are leading the way towards a fairer world order, as he makes his first visit to the key ally since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine last month.
Lavrov landed in the eastern city of Huangshan early on Wednesday.
In a video released by the Russian foreign ministry ahead of a meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Lavrov said the world was "living through a very serious stage in the history of international relations".
At the end of this reshaping of global relations "we, together with you, and with our sympathisers will move towards a multipolar, just, democratic world order", Lavrov said.
The two foreign ministers were shown on Chinese state TV in face masks bumping elbows in front of their national flags ahead of the meeting.
Lavrov will attend a series of meetings hosted by China to discuss ways to help Afghanistan.
Diplomats from the United States and the Taliban-led country's neighbours are also expected to attend.
But Russia's bloody assault on Ukraine is likely to loom large over proceedings.
Unlike many Western nations, Beijing has refused to condemn the invasion and has provided a level of diplomatic cover for an increasingly isolated Russia.
US officials have accused China of signalling "willingness" to provide military and economic aid to Russia, while US President Joe Biden has compared Russia's invasion of Ukraine to China's crushing of protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.
China and Russia have become closer in recent years, with President Vladimir Putin notably attending the opening ceremony of the Beijing Winter Olympics last month, days before the invasion of Ukraine.
The strongman leader and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping declared the relationship between their two countries knew "no limits" while signing energy deals worth billions of dollars.
UK judges to withdraw from Hong Kong's top court
London (AFP) March 30, 2022 –
The UK government said Wednesday that its judges will no longer sit on Hong Kong's top court over opposition to China's national security law, with two Supreme Court judges resigning immediately.
"The situation has reached a tipping point where it is no longer tenable for British judges to sit on Hong Kong's leading court, and would risk legitimising oppression," Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said.
"We have seen a systematic erosion of liberty and democracy in Hong Kong," she added, noting the authorities had "cracked down on free speech, the free press and free association" since the security law was imposed in 2020.
Truss said she had reached the decision to withdraw the judges from the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal following consultations with the UK Supreme Court and ministers responsible for the judiciary.
The UK Supreme Court said its two judges currently sitting on the Hong Kong court in two of 12 overseas non-permanent positions had resigned with immediate effect.
"The judges of the Supreme Court cannot continue to sit in Hong Kong without appearing to endorse an administration which has departed from values of political freedom, and freedom of expression," its president Robert Reed said.
Reed said he and fellow judge Patrick Hodge have submitted their resignations with immediate effect.
Under the Basic Law — Hong Kong's mini-constitution — senior judges from common law jurisdictions are able to sit as non-permanent members of the Court of Final Appeal.
Eight of the 12 current overseas non-permanent judges sitting on the court are British.
It was unclear whether the British judges who are not members of the Supreme Court would also be withdrawing from the Hong Kong court with immediate effect.
The move by Britain — which handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997 — to pull its judges may add pressure on Australia and Canada to do the same.