New Zealand
Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova’s comment on the APEC trade ministers’ meeting
An aggressive pro-Western minority in multilateral associations of Asia-Pacific countries will not stop its attempts to impose a confrontational agenda on the regional community.
The meeting of the trade ministers of the APEC Forum that took place in Bangkok on May 21-22, 2022 is yet another graphic example of these attempts. The United States, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, joined by Japan, made an unfriendly demarche against Russia that went nowhere because APEC is dominated by a desire for depoliticised, constructive and future-oriented cooperation. The delegations of these five countries ostentatiously walked out during the speech by Russian Minister of Economic Development Maxim Reshetnikov. Other delegations did not support this move and used the resulting calm as an opportunity to focus on key global and regional economic issues. The majority of APEC members also did not support attempts that were a priori aimed at wrecking the important decisions of the ministerial meeting.
Under the circumstances, the afore-mentioned unfriendly group to which South Korea and Chile were attached in the spirit of Western solidarity had nothing to do but put out a separate press release that groundlessly blames Russia for the world’s economic troubles. It is clear to everyone that this is just another awkward attempt by these economies to blame others for their own financial, climate and food policy miscalculations and the West’s tendency to undermine established production and marketing chains and unleashing sanction wars on their rivals.
We would like to make special mention of the well-balanced efforts made by Thailand’s current chairmanship to strengthen APEC. As an inalienable part of the Asia-Pacific Region, Russia remains committed to working in this important regional forum to expand its experience in ensuring fair conditions of trade, free and equal access to technology, sustainable development and stronger connections in the region.