China has expressed concern after Russia declared two regions of Georgia
independent. As Daniel Schearf reports from Beijing, China has its own concerns
about territorial integrity.
China's Foreign Ministry says it is
watching with close concern after Russia signed a declaration recognizing South
Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent from Georgia.
Russian President
Dmitri Medvedev's declaration Tuesday was swiftly condemned by the United States
and European powers while China's response was more reserved.
Russian military pounded Georgian forces earlier this month after they tried to reassert control over pro-Moscow South Ossetia.
Russia later agreed to pull back troops under international pressure, but Georgian officials say they still occupy parts of the country.
The Russian president was seeking support on the issue from China and central Asian nations at a meeting in Tajikistan of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
The SCO, however, did not give its support and instead called for reconciliation and more talks to resolve the dispute over control of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
One of the SCO's declared purposes is to oppose separatism. Moreover, some of the members - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, like Georgia, had once been part of the former Soviet Union. They became independent nations after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
China, the founder of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, is also concerned about sending the wrong signal to independence supporters in Tibet, Xinjiang, and Taiwan, the self-ruling island that Beijing claims as its own.