Breaking 16:31 UN warns climate threshold overshoot as emissions urgency rises 16:05 Nasa orders ISS crew to shelter amid worsening air leak 15:49 United States plans regional drone training center in Morocco 14:40 Morocco wins overwhelming ECOSOC seat with 178 votes 14:30 Royal Air Maroc expands fleet with Embraer E190 delivery 14:15 Private credit growth slows as lending activity loses momentum 14:15 Intel and Hitachi expand AI partnership for industrial manufacturing 14:00 Trump vows US will prevail over Iran amid tensions 13:47 United Kingdom projects oil at 100 dollars through 2028 13:33 Oman suspends oil exports after Mina al Fahal explosion 13:15 India and United States move closer to first phase of trade agreement 12:30 U.S. terrorist designation of Brazilian gangs raises business cost concerns 11:40 Trafigura warns global oil supply loss deepens crisis 11:30 Lululemon shares slide as weak forecasts fuel turnaround concerns 11:17 Bitcoin falls to lowest level since February selloff intensifies 11:00 J.P. Morgan upgrades Tesla to ‘Neutral’, citing robotics as key long-term growth driver 10:57 SpaceX IPO excludes investors from China and Hong Kong over compliance concerns, report says 10:48 Nvidia unveils RTX Spark chip for Windows PC push 10:34 U.S. treatment centers prepared for Ebola as global outbreak concerns persist 10:21 Astronomers detect wind from Milky Way black hole after decades 09:59 Iata set to slash airline profit outlook amid fuel shock 09:44 Iran and Russia sign $25 billion nuclear cooperation deal amid US talks stall 09:30 FIFA and Netflix team up to launch official World Cup 2026 video game 09:15 Bengio warns world is building uncontrollable artificial intelligence systems 09:09 Trump’s “Crazy” remark deepens strain with Netanyahu at sensitive political moment 08:54 Google rolls out Gemini avatar for AI video clones 08:19 Microsoft pushes in-house AI as Anthropic costs come under scrutiny 07:53 Anthropic warns AI may soon build its own successors 07:36 Engine shortages ground hundreds of aircraft worldwide 07:30 Petro criticizes U.S. support for rival candidate ahead of Colombia’s presidential runoff 07:19 Bitcoin outperforms Nasdaq despite sharp correction, says Raoul Pal 07:19 Spielberg returns to sci-fi with alien thriller Disclosure Day 07:15 United States expands sanctions against Cuban president and Castro family members

China opposes foreign interference in Latin America

Monday 05 January 2026 - 12:50
By: Dakir Madiha
China opposes foreign interference in Latin America

China's Foreign Ministry reiterated Monday its opposition to foreign meddling in Latin American affairs as the UN Security Council convened an emergency meeting to review the U.S. military operation capturing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro three days prior. In statements released Monday morning, the ministry declared Beijing "opposes any interference in the internal affairs of Latin American countries for whatever reason" and pledged China's readiness "to support Latin America on issues of sovereignty, security, and territorial integrity." It emphasized that "China upholds a policy of non-interference" with a "consistent and stable" approach toward the region.

The remarks preceded Maduro's first appearance Monday at noon before a Manhattan federal court on narco-terrorism and cocaine importation charges. China had previously urged the U.S. on Sunday to "ensure the personal safety of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, release them immediately, and stop overthrowing the Venezuelan government," branding the strike a "blatant violation of international law."

The Security Council session, requested by Colombia with backing from China and Russia, followed widespread global criticism of the January 3 raid. UN Deputy Secretary-General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo briefed the council, after Secretary-General António Guterres described the U.S. action as "a dangerous precedent." Russia's Foreign Ministry issued multiple condemnations of the "armed aggression," demanding Maduro's release. Six nations Spain, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Uruguay released a joint statement rejecting "unilateral military operations in Venezuela" as international law breaches.

The U.S. operation, codenamed "Absolute Resolve," began before 2 a.m. local time on January 3 with over 150 American aircraft striking northern Venezuela. Delta Force, backed by CIA agents, captured Maduro and wife Cilia Flores in Caracas. Venezuelan officials reported over 80 deaths in the assault. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had spoken with Venezuelan counterpart Yván Gil on December 17, voicing support for Venezuelan sovereignty and opposing "all forms of unilateral intimidation." China backed Venezuela's call for the UN Security Council emergency session.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.