Zepp-LaRouche in China: There Are Some People Who Don’t Like the Coming End of 500 Years of Colonialism
By Dennis SmallApril 27, 2025 (EIRNS)—“There is right now a huge struggle going on in the world, which I think China is one of the leaders of,” Schiller Institute founder Helga Zepp-LaRouche stated in an April 25 panel discussion in China on “Innovation Pathways in the Global Green Transition,” organized by the China Media Group, with CGTN host Yang Zhao. Speaking along with ambassadors and media specialists, Zepp-LaRouche set the tone for the entire discussion:
“This is the effort by the countries of the Global Majority to overcome 500 years of colonialism for good, by no longer being exporters of raw materials, but to develop the production chain in their own countries. There are obviously some people who don’t like that; and they would like to maintain the neo-colonial forms.”
As Zepp-LaRouche was speaking, “the people who don’t like that”—the practitioners of British geopolitics centered in the City of London and Wall Street—were busy launching deadly provocations around the globe, to make sure that the BRICS nations are destabilized, and that the U.S. and NATO stay on course for an end-game confrontation with Russia and China.
In the India-Pakistan theater, an April 22 terrorist attack killing 26 tourists in the Indian-controlled area of Kashmir has led to rapid escalation on both sides. India has announced it is suspending the all-important 1960 Indus Waters Treaty between India and Pakistan—which regulates the flow of water to the two countries, both of which need it desperately—and revoked nearly all visas of Pakistanis residing in India. High-level Pakistani authorities are talking openly about the option of launching a nuclear strike against India—which is also a nuclear weapons power! Fortunately, the Defense Minister of Pakistan has pointed the finger at outside forces deploying terrorism in the region—and named Great Britain and the United States as the guilty parties for the last 30 years.
In Russia, authorities have captured the man who assassinated Gen.-Lt. Yaroslav Moskalik of the Russian General Staff on April 25, and identified him as an agent deployed by Kiev. Leading Russian intelligence experts quickly explained on national television: “We should remember … that terrorist acts of this kind are done under the supervision and direct guidance of the British special services.”
And in Iran, a huge explosion rocked the port of Bandar Abbas on April 26, killing at least 25 and injuring nearly 1,400. Although it has not yet been determined if this was an accident or sabotage, it happened at the precise moment that the U.S. and Iranian governments are involved in delicate negotiations that are essential to bring peace to the war-torn region of Southwest Asia—which the Israeli and British governments are devoutly committed to preventing.
India, Russia, Iran—all are members of the BRICS, which is leading the struggle to create a new international development architecture to replace the current bankrupt system.
As Zepp-LaRouche stated in her remarks during the panel discussion in China:
“We have now the 70th anniversary of the Bandung Conference, and at that time in 1955, President Sukarno and Zhou Enlai and Nehru were warning that colonialism still exists in its modern form, through trade relations, access to credit, and so forth. So now we are in this historic epochal change where the countries of the Global Majority want to overcome that, in large part possibly through the rise of China and through the development of the BRICS countries.”
The upcoming May 24-25 conference of the Schiller Institute will bring together leading intellectuals and statesmen from nations of both the North and the South, to deliberate on how to best bring about precisely such an epochal change.
