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Before Putin's Beijing trip, signs of Chinese influence are everywhere in Moscow

Chinese business centres near traditional Chinese pavilions. Russian adults practicing Kung Fu and learning Mandarin. Sizzling food being served at Chinese restaurants.

Signs of Beijing's influence are everywhere in Moscow as President Vladimir Putin prepares to visit China next week.

It seems like the contacts with China have intensified. "A mutual interest is increasing," said Natalia Gerasimova. She was a manager of a Russian company, and visited the Chinese landscape park in Moscow.

"They are welcoming to us and they treat us well." In Russia, I also do not see resistance to these relationships. "Yes, we may have different mentalities but we share some similarities".

China bought Russian oil, sold goods from cars to electronic devices and helped Moscow when the West cut off ties after Russia sent tens thousands of troops to Ukraine in 2022. Bilateral trade reached a record of $245 billion by 2024.

Putin and Chinese president Xi Jinping have signed a partnership with "no limitations" in 2022.

Three Russian sources said that although China is still Russia's largest trading partner, the trade turnover has decreased this year. Putin will try to reverse this trend at his summit meeting with Xi.

It is difficult to ignore the Chinese influence in Moscow.

A Chinese business center in northeastern Moscow has a Chinese flag flying and nearby, people are strolling through a landscape park under ornate Chinese pavillions.

'PRAGMATISM'

Some Russians claim that the close relationship is pragmatic and China acts primarily for its own interest.

"China is all about industry and the labour market. It is not about technology." "Technology always comes from the West, from the U.S. and Europe," said Roman Dmitriev a businessman who visited the landscape park.

We will return to the West as soon as it reopens. It will be a logical move. For now, China will be our biggest booster. "We can compare it to an athletic friend at school who can defend you and fight for your."

Natalia Wang said that the demand for children and adults to study Chinese has suddenly increased at Moscow's "Chinese First".

It was like a switch had been flipped. She said that one day, "the applications for studying Chinese started flooding in."

Now, Chinese-made vehicles are common in Moscow.

Valery Bondarenko said that Chinese cars have improved "in leaps-and-bounds", but many Russians remain sceptical.

He said, "They are facing our consumer conservatism." "We still think that German or Japanese vehicles guarantee 100% safety and quality." (Reporting and writing by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Timothy Heritage.)

(source: Reuters)