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Major Western leaders shun China WWII military parade
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 25, 2015


Ex-Chinese finance ministry official named to lead AIIB
Beijing (AFP) Aug 25, 2015 - Former Chinese vice finance minister Jin Liqun has been elected to head the new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), the Chinese government said Tuesday.

Jin was elected as the bank's "incoming president" at a two-day meeting of chief negotiators in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, according to a statement by China's finance ministry.

Beijing last month had named Jin as its preferred candidate to head the new institution.

The AIIB has been viewed by some as a rival to the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. The United States and Japan -- the world's largest and third-largest economies, respectively -- have notably declined to join.

Jin has previously worked for both institutions. He was also formerly a top official at the China Investment Corporation, the country's sovereign wealth fund.

He has a master's degree in English literature, speaks fluent English and reportedly good French and was a Hubert Humphrey Fellow in economics at Boston University in 1987-88.

Jin's selection had been widely expected as Beijing will initially have a 26.06 percent share of the votes at the bank, giving it veto power over the choice of the president, which requires a 75 percent majority.

Beijing will be by far the largest AIIB shareholder at about 30 percent, according to the legal framework signed by 50 founding member countries in late June.

From Belarus to Vanuatu, China on Tuesday issued a list of world leaders attending next week's huge military parade to mark Japan's defeat in World War II that was notable for its absences.

The display, a show of strength which comes as Beijing takes a more assertive stance regionally, will see 12,000 soldiers and 500 pieces of hardware roll through Tiananmen Square, with almost 200 aircraft flying overhead.

Chinese officials listed 24 heads of state and government as attending, with Russian President Vladimir Putin, South Korea's Park Geun-Hye and South Africa's Jacob Zuma among the most prominent. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will also go.

Notable among the absentees on the list was North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un, who has yet to visit Beijing despite China being his country's key diplomatic protector.

Pyongyang was sending politburo member Choe Ryong-Hae, officials said.

"It is up to foreign countries to decide on who to send," said Zhang Ming, a deputy foreign minister. "As the old Chinese saying goes, 'anyone who comes is our guest'. We welcome them all."

Communist China generally shies away from the vast annual demonstrations of military might that were a hallmark of the Soviet Union, normally holding such events once a decade to mark the foundation of the People's Republic.

It has struggled to attract world-wide interest for the parade as world leaders are wary of the tone of the event, and the risk of lending it legitimacy.

Beijing is becoming increasingly assertive in the region and regularly accuses Tokyo of failing to show sufficient contrition for Japan's 20th-century invasion of China.

The conflict is officially known in the country as the "Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War".

Zhang told reporters: "The commemorations do not target any specific country, not today's Japan nor the Japanese people in general."

But neither Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe nor any official representative of Tokyo will go. Former prime minister Tomiichi Murayama -- who issued a landmark apology for the war in 1995 -- will be present in a personal capacity.

The only European Union head of state or government named as attending was Czech President Milos Zeman.

France and Italy will send their foreign ministers, officials said, but the governments of the US, Germany and Canada will be represented only by their resident ambassadors.

Former British prime minister Tony Blair will attend, but not in an official capacity.

A total of 17 countries are sending troops to take part, including Russia, Cuba, Serbia and Mexico, along with several of China's neighbours.

Chinese President Xi Jinping attended a similar parade in Moscow in May commemorating victory over Nazi Germany.

Xi and Putin hold frequent summits and their countries, both permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, often take similar stances there on divisive issues such as the conflict in Syria.

China's Communists were largely an underground force during World War II, with the brunt of the campaign against the Japanese fought by soldiers of the country's then Nationalist government led by Chiang Kai-Shek.


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