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Beijing to give 50 million Chinese Yuan in aid to Kyiv to mitigate consequences of emergencies

Hindustani78

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Beijing to give 50 million Chinese Yuan in aid to Kyiv to mitigate consequences of emergencies| Ukrinform
KYIV, January 28 /Ukrinform/. China has signed an agreement with Ukraine on cooperation and donation of aid worth 50 million Yuan ($8 million) to mitigate consequences of emergencies.

"The governments of Ukraine and China signed an agreement on economic and technical cooperation. It will make possible to use donated assistance in the amount of 50 million Yuan from the Government of China for implementation of priority projects of the Ukrainian partner," the statement said.

It was also noted that the agreement provides for such projects to be agreed by signing additional intergovernmental agreements. It is expected that Chinese funds will be used to support healthcare, education and mitigation of emergency consequences projects.

The agreement was signed on January 27. Deputy Minister of Economic Development and Trade Minister Ihor Veremey was a signatory from the Ukrainian side and Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People's Republic of China to Ukraine Zhang Siyun was a signatory for China.
 
Junta will steal all the money to the last penny.
Defending your country isnt a crime and enough bullshit about western backing etc, of course there is western backing there, just like there is Russia backing.
 
Consequences of emergencies? Like what?

its mainly to reduce losses of civilian population.

Defending your country isnt a crime and enough bullshit about western backing etc, of course there is western backing there, just like there is Russia backing.

Ukraine do have a strong military industrial structure and Western backing is just for providing winter uniforms and none of the western military hardware is being transferred to Ukrainian military.
 
Defending your country isnt a crime and enough bullshit about western backing etc, of course there is western backing there, just like there is Russia backing.
Have I talked about defending of their country or something like that? I said that they will steal all the money and they will successfully do it.
And enough bullshit about bullshit.
 
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (R) meets with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 21, 2015. (Xinhua/Li Tao)
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In plain language, this 50 mil yuan aid is for saving lives from disasters (e.g. earthquake, war, power shortage)?

Technical and Education co operation agreements were even signed.
 
Iv
Beijing to give 50 million Chinese Yuan in aid to Kyiv to mitigate consequences of emergencies| Ukrinform
KYIV, January 28 /Ukrinform/. China has signed an agreement with Ukraine on cooperation and donation of aid worth 50 million Yuan ($8 million) to mitigate consequences of emergencies.

"The governments of Ukraine and China signed an agreement on economic and technical cooperation. It will make possible to use donated assistance in the amount of 50 million Yuan from the Government of China for implementation of priority projects of the Ukrainian partner," the statement said.

It was also noted that the agreement provides for such projects to be agreed by signing additional intergovernmental agreements. It is expected that Chinese funds will be used to support healthcare, education and mitigation of emergency consequences projects.

The agreement was signed on January 27. Deputy Minister of Economic Development and Trade Minister Ihor Veremey was a signatory from the Ukrainian side and Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People's Republic of China to Ukraine Zhang Siyun was a signatory for China.
Woow Russian best friend at his best.

Is this a ploy to corner Putin to accept China Republic Day invitation ? But Russians will be fuming by now .
 
Ukrainian military Industrial complex has been working closely with the Chinese.China has become the second largest trade partner of Ukraine after the EU
China’s Stake in the Ukraine Crisis
Ukraine’s powerful military industrial complex gives Beijing a bigger stake in the crisis than meets the eye.


One of the important subtexts in the clash between Russia and the Ukrainian government in Kiev has been the importance to Moscow of the significant and well-developed Ukrainian military-industrial complex, located primarily in eastern and southern Ukraine. According to SIPRI data, Ukraine was the world’s eighth largest arms exporter between 2009 and 2013, and Ukraine’s military-industrial complex is clearly one reason Moscow does not want to let go of the country.
It is also one of the most important reasons why Beijing cannot support Moscow in its bid to expand its influence in Ukraine, which led to China choosing to abstain from a UN Security Council draft resolution condemning Russia’s annexation of Crimea. China needs Ukrainian expertise in aircraft and helicopter engines, shipbuilding, landing craft, missile/space technology, and other areas. A Russian takeover would make Beijing even more beholden to Moscow for its defense needs. China has more at stake in the outcome of the Ukraine-Russia imbroglio than meets the eye.
What are the more important aspects of the Ukrainian MIC? For starters, Ukraine makes the Antonov AN225 (the world’s largest airplane), medium-size transport planes, gliders, and regional jets at a facility near Kiev. Motor-Sich, based in southeastern Ukraine’s Zaporizhia, is a leading producer of aircraft and helicopter engines, and in fact nearly all of Russia’s military helicopters are powered by Motor-Sich engines. Located in Dnepropetrovsk (also in southeastern Ukraine), Ukraine has an excellent space rocket and missile design and production industry, which produced rockets for the Soviet space program, and today produces/services Russia’s primary intercontinental ballistic missile, the SS18, as well as parts for Russia’s famous Soyuz rockets.
Along its Black Sea coast, Ukraine boasts an impressive shipbuilding industry, which produced the Varyag, which China purchased and retrofitted into the Liaoning, China’s first aircraft carrier, and according to Russian Vladimir Voronov, of the 54 surface warships acquisitions the Russian navy has currently planned, 31 would have Ukrainian engines in them. Ukraine also has an important armored vehicle-producing facility in Kharkiv, maker of the BTR-4 armored personnel carrier and the T84 main battle tank (a tank competitive with and having a more powerful engine than Russia’s primary main battle tank, the T-90, according to experts). The country also produces air-to-air missiles for fighter jets, and scores of parts and services for military applications, including some for Russia’s top-of-the-line fifth-generation jet fighter, the Su50 PAK/FA.
What are the implications of this for China? Most importantly, China has been behind the curve in military technology when compared to Russian, European and American competitors. Maintaining access to the Ukrainian arms market and its expertise is thus important to the Chinese arms industry, given its attractive offerings that are often priced more competitively than comparable Russian products. Moreover Ukraine does not appear to be bothered as much as Russia is by China’s tendency to buy military hardware abroad, then reverse engineer and manufacture copies at home. That issue has caused considerable tension between Russia and China, most notably in China’s purchase of the Su27 fighter aircraft from Russia, which Russia says China copied in its entirety when it produced its own J-11B fighter, leading to Russia ceasing coproduction agreements with China, and making Moscow very reluctant to sell China its newer technologies. However, Ukraine has sold China one Russian Su33 prototype which China used as the basis for its own J15 navy aircraft, and it also sells jet engines and helicopter engines, which China sorely needs.
Ukraine has also been a source of advanced air-to-air, surface-to-air, and cruise missiles for Beijing, as well as the Zubr landing craft (produced in Crimea and useful for potential operations against Taiwan, for example), the Varyag, and the Xue Long (or Snow Dragon, China’s only ice-breaker, in the news recently as it participated in the rescue of a trapped Russian ice breaker off Antarctica).
Changes in Ukraine’s status could spell trouble for China’s defense procurement and development in a number of ways. If Ukraine were to remain whole (sans Crimea) and join the EU, it might have to give up its military trade with China, because (as the U.S. does) the EU maintains post-Tiananmen sanctions against China. On the other hand, if Ukraine (or eastern Ukraine) is brought under Russian control, some or all of Ukraine’s arms deals (especially those that undermine Russia’s position in arms trade) may be halted, dialed down, or at least become subject to the ups and downs that have marked Sino-Russian arms trade in recent years.
The recent changes in Ukraine threaten China’s significant arms trade with Ukraine and can only further complicate China’s military modernization plans. Consequently, China has much at stake in the outcome of events in Ukraine.
China’s Stake in the Ukraine Crisis | The Diplomat
China-Ukraine relations | The Diplomat

The GTu's powering the new Chinese destroyers (052B/C/D) are either Ukrainian (imported) or Chinese licenced versions....
 
I think its more to do with the space sector.China and Ukraine do have strong co operation in Space sector.

8M USD is a small amount. That automatically precludes military and space collaboration.

The article already said the aid was going to "healthcare, education and mitigation of emergency consequences projects".
 

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