Cina nomina Yan Wenbin rappresentante speciale per gli affari SCO

Il governo cinese ha nominato l’ambasciatore Yan Wenbin come suo rappresentante speciale per gli affari dell’Organizzazione di cooperazione di Shanghai (SCO) e coordinatore nazionale per questo meccanismo regionale. La designazione è stata annunciata a Pechino il 14 gennaio. Questa mossa mira a rafforzare l’impegno della Cina nella SCO.

In un annuncio diramato a Pechino, la Cina ha nominato l’ambasciatore Yan Wenbin rappresentante speciale del governo cinese per le questioni relative all’Organizzazione di cooperazione di Shanghai (SCO). Egli fungerà anche da coordinatore nazionale della Cina per questo organismo regionale, che comprende diversi paesi asiatici ed eurasiatici. La SCO, istituita nel 2001, promuove la cooperazione in materia di sicurezza, economia e cultura tra i suoi membri, come Cina, Russia, India e altri. Questa nomina sottolinea l’impegno continuo di Pechino a rafforzare i legami multilaterali nella regione. Non sono stati forniti ulteriori dettagli sulle specifiche mansioni di Yan Wenbin nel suo nuovo ruolo, ma si prevede che supporteranno le priorità strategiche della Cina nell’ambito della SCO. La designazione avviene in un contesto di crescente rilevanza della cooperazione regionale, in particolare per la stabilità e lo sviluppo economico.

Articoli correlati

President Xi Jinping meets Hong Kong's John Lee and Macao's Sam Hou Fai in Beijing to hear their work reports.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Xi meets Hong Kong and Macao leaders to hear work reports

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

On Tuesday, President Xi Jinping met separately in Beijing with Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee and Macao Chief Executive Sam Hou Fai, hearing reports on the current situations in Hong Kong and Macao as well as their governments' work. Xi fully recognized the efforts of both SAR governments and stressed the need to resolutely implement the 'one country, two systems' principle while aligning with the national 15th Five-Year Plan to better integrate into and serve the country's overall development.

A senior cadre at Beijing’s liaison office in Hong Kong, Qi Bin, is expected to return to the capital for a new role advising on economic policies for China’s next five-year plan. The position is deputy director of an economic committee under the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference. Qi, with a strong financial background, recently appeared at an event for a cross-border innovation zone.

Riportato dall'IA

In Beijing, China has announced a new oversight body for Buddhist clergy's conduct, one day after the Buddhist Association of China's 11th national congress concluded. Fourth-ranking official Wang Huning urged the association to exercise 'comprehensive and rigorous governance over the religion'. The move follows the 'CEO monk' scandal involving violations of monastic vows.

In the January 6, 2026, Beijing summit between Presidents Xi Jinping and Lee Jae-myung—previously noted for pledges amid regional tensions—the leaders outlined steps to build mutual trust, expand cooperation in emerging sectors, and enhance multilateral coordination, as analyzed by experts and complemented by a first ladies' exchange.

Riportato dall'IA

During the 20th round of China-Russia strategic security consultations in Moscow, the two sides exchanged views on Japan and reached a high degree of consensus, vowing to uphold World War II victory outcomes and oppose any whitewashing of colonial aggression. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian urged Japan to retract erroneous remarks on Taiwan and take concrete actions to enable normal exchanges.

Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu told Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi that Moscow continues to support Beijing's position on Taiwan, while keeping a close eye on Japan's accelerated militarization. The remarks, reported by the TASS news agency, underscore the strengthening alliance between Russia and China. This comes as tensions persist over regional security issues.

Riportato dall'IA

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney met with Chinese leaders in Beijing on January 16, 2026, pledging to enhance dialogue and cooperation while upholding the multilateral trading system. His four-day state visit signals a warming in bilateral relations, the first by a Canadian PM in eight years.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta