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Suspicion Deepens as China Quizzed Over Missing Minister Qin

Beijing says foreign minister Qin Gang is absent for undisclosed health reasons but the mystery threatens to unsettle efforts to rebuild relations with the West


China's Foreign Minister Qin Gang visits Oslo, Norway May 12, 2023. Terje Pedersen/NTB/via REUTERS/File Photo
China's Foreign Minister Qin Gang in Oslo, Norway, on May 12, 2023. Photo: Reuters

 

The mysterious disappearance of Chinese foreign minister Qin Gang from public view threatens to derail Western efforts to rebuild relations with Beijing just when trust was starting to build again, analysts fear.

The government has said Qin is off for unspecified health reasons, but with those and other comments excised from official transcripts and absent from state media, speculation has swirled in a country notoriously opaque about the private lives of its leaders.

And the information vacuum has deepened suspicion among some diplomats and observers of China’s secretive decision-making at a time that it is seeking to reengage with the world after years of Covid-induced isolation.

 

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“Qin’s disappearance does cast much uncertainty and confusion over the consistency, stability and credibility of Beijing’s decision-making,” said Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Stimson Center in Washington.

“If a vice-national level leader can just disappear without much of an explanation, people find it difficult to trust and count on any Chinese leader or official and their positions.”

Asked at his ministry’s daily press conference on Thursday, about his status and when he would be returning to duties, spokesperson Mao Ning said: “I don’t have any information for your question.”

China said on Wednesday that Wang Yi – Qin’s predecessor – will fill in at a BRICS meeting in Johannesburg on July 24-25.

Qin’s vanishing from the diplomatic scene is also raising scheduling questions for other engagements.

Britain has not been able to fix a date for its foreign minister to visit China, a trip slated to happen as soon as this month and seen as critical to patching up turbulent ties, sources said.

Meanwhile, a visit by the European Union’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, shelved at the last minute this month, is now not due to happen until the autumn, a senior EU official said.

It is not clear whether even then Borrell would meet Qin as initially planned, the official said.

 

Qin Considered ‘Rising Star’

A prolonged absence will “confuse other countries seeking to build channels of communication with China”, said Wen-Ti Sung, a political scientist at the Australian National University.

“Predictability and transparency are essential to regularising dialogues and to trust-building, both of which are key ingredients to sustained cooperation.”

Qin has been considered a rising star in China’s political firmament. The former aide to President Xi Jinping was appointed foreign minister in December after serving less than two years as ambassador to the United States.

Since taking up the foreign minister post, he has played a prominent role in steering rocky US-China ties, meeting Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Beijing in June on the first visit to China by the top US diplomat in five years.

But his last public engagement was a meeting with visiting Russian, Sri Lankan and Vietnamese officials on June 25. Then he disappeared.

 

Baidu ‘Qin’ Searches Surge

Aside from the brief comment about his health on July 11, his ministry has declined to offer any further information, rebuffing reporters’ questions at daily briefings and leaving out the exchanges, including the initial health comment, from its official transcript.

Comments on articles mentioning Qin shared on the WeChat messaging app have been disabled and a search by Reuters found no recent mentions of Qin in state media.

But there has been no shortage of interest.

Searches for “Qin Gang” on the Baidu search engine have increased 28-fold in the past week to more than 380,000 a day, according to platform data.

Qin’s absence has also been widely discussed in the diplomatic community, with some saying it is another example of China’s lack of transparency.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

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