China–Kazakhstan relations

China–Kazakhstan relations (Kazakh: Қазақ-Қытай қарым-қатынасы, romanized: Kazak-Kitai Karim-Katinasy; simplified Chinese: 中哈关系; traditional Chinese: 中哈關係; pinyin: Zhōnghā Guānxì) refer to the relations between historical China and the Kazakhs up to the modern relations between the PRC and Kazakhstan. Ever since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1992, political, cultural, and economic ties have developed between the two. The Chinese Communist Party and Kazakhstan's Amanat have good ties. China has said that it values exchanges between the two parties and hopes to strengthen ties and cooperation even further.

Kazakhstan-People's Republic of China relations

China

Kazakhstan

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union and independence of Kazakhstan, China and Kazakhstan have pursued a process of rapprochement and strengthening ties, with a series of border agreements, economic cooperation, and strategic partnership. However, several incidents with regard to Chinese nationalism as well as Xinjiang conflict in recent years have hampered the development process.

Kazakhstan acknowledges the One China principle and China's sovereignty over Taiwan. The PRC has an embassy in Astana; Kazakhstan has one in Beijing.

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