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Chinese tycoon unveils $10bn Ukrainian port project: report
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 06, 2013


Ukraine's Yanukovych meets China's President Xi
Beijing (AFP) Dec 05, 2013 - Ukraine's President Viktor Yanukovych met China's President Xi Jinping in Beijing Thursday, while opposition street protests continue at home in the nation's worst political crisis in a decade.

Yanukovych said that China and Ukraine were working to build a "bright future", while Xi described him as "an old friend of the Chinese people" and called for further cooperation between the two countries.

"We have discussed questions of stepping up our strategic partnership and a shift to practical implementation of a whole number of joint projects in various industries," Yanukovych said in a statement

The meeting came as a senior US diplomat said that Washington supports the Ukrainians protesting for a future in Europe.

Yanukovych's last-minute decision to scrap a key political and trade pact with the European Union and the use of violence against peaceful demonstrators sparked the largest protests in the ex-Soviet nation since the pro-democracy 2004 Orange Revolution.

Yanukovych's administration survived a no-confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday over the issue, but the opposition and demonstrators are now demanding his resignation.

In his statement, Yanukovych said Kiev and Beijing plan to focus on aircraft and shipbuilding, agriculture, energy and infrastructure projects for which Ukraine will receive around $8 billion in investments.

Yanukovych kicked off his China visit in Xian on Wednesday, where he toured the World Heritage site housing the Terracotta Warriors, buried in the 3rd century BC by China's first emperor Qin Shi Huang to guard his tomb.

A Chinese tycoon who plans to dig a canal across Nicaragua has unveiled his latest project -- a $10 billion deal to build a deepwater port in Ukraine, giving him a foothold in Europe, state-run media said Friday.

Wang Jing's Beijing Interoceanic Canal Investment Management Co. and Ukrainian partner Kievgidroinvest will pour a total of $10 billion into building the port, oil reserves and an economic development zone on the Crimean peninsula, the Shanghai Securities News said.

Wang was little known both in China and abroad until he secured the right to dig a waterway in Nicaragua -- estimated to cost $40 billion -- that will rival the Panama Canal and be hugely significant to world trade if it is completed.

Wang has denied any connections with the Chinese government, but reportedly owns a car with military licence plates, broadcasts army songs twice a day in one of his companies and has pictures of Chinese leaders visiting the firm hanging in its lobby.

"The deal was reached with the strong support from the Chinese and Ukrainian governments," the newspaper quoted Wang as saying at the announcement.

"It is significant because it will rebuild the Silk Road on the sea, promote Asia-Europe trade and deepen the cultural, political and economic exchanges between China and the West," he said, comparing it to the ancient trade route linking his country and Europe.

The first phase of the project will see an investment of $3 billion to rebuild the Sevastopol port and construct the deepwater port as well as the economic zone that will house electronic and IT companies, the report said.

Construction will start by the end of 2014 and finish within two years, Wang was cited as saying.

At least $7 billion will be invested in the second phase to build grain and crude oil reserves, natural gas production bases and other facilities, the paper added.

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