Chinese President: We must stand against the color revolutions of the West.
In his speech at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the President of China called for countries to confront the color revolutions of Western countries.
The President of China called on the countries to stand up against the color revolutions of the Western countries at the virtual meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization is a political, economic, and security organization in which China, Russia, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan are present.
This organization is the largest regional organization in the world in terms of population and geographical area. Today, this organization expanded with the addition of Iran.
The Chinese president said: “It is necessary to fundamentally oppose any attempt to interfere from outside and create color revolutions under any pretext.”
The president of China has spoken many times in condemning “Western revolutions”. At the end of last year, he also said that China is against any attempt to disturb the peace of the people under the guise of “human rights”.
The term “color revolution” was first used to describe subversion in countries separated from the Soviet Union, but today the term is used for American efforts to overthrow all governments opposed to the interests of the United States and its allies.
Most of the so-called “color revolutions” have been carried out with the support of so-called American humanitarian organizations that work under the supervision of the country’s intelligence agencies.
The “Rose Revolution” in Georgia in 2003 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004 are two examples of such American revolutions.
During this speech, Xi Jinping also criticized the imposition of unilateral sanctions by countries without the authorization of the United Nations and asked the members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to increase trade with national currencies.
China, along with Iran, Russia, and some other countries, is one of the opponents of the US unilateral sanctions system and its actions against third parties and countries. Beijing has described these sanctions as “judicial interference”.
In addition, Beijing, along with Iran and Russia, has started efforts to end the dominance of the dollar in the world’s economic exchanges. Last month, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said during a meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Beijing that nearly three-quarters of transactions between Moscow and Beijing are currently done in rubles or yuan.
Moscow, like China, has repeatedly stated that it considers the dollar and euro unreliable because their use in the country’s cross-border transactions is not considered safe due to Western sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine.