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Cold shoulder on beef

China ignores Australian pleas

- DANIEL McCULLOCH

CHINA has ignored Australia’s attempts to discuss trade tensions over beef and barley imports.

Trade Minister Simon Birmingham confirmed his Chinese counterpar­t had not responded to requests for the talks.

“We have not secured said meeting yet. I would hope that would be forthcomin­g,” Senator Birmingham told parliament yesterday.

Western Australia fears it could become the meat in the sandwich as the trade tangle with China heats up. Premier Mark McGowan has urged conservati­ve politician­s to tone down their inflammato­ry rhetoric.

“Some federal Liberal MPs from Western Australia have been very hostile with some of our trading relationsh­ips,” he told state parliament.

“We need to ensure we have balanced commentary and a balanced approach to these issues to ensure that our citizens aren’t collateral damage.”

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk is also skittish about the stoush. “China is an incredibly important trading partner to Queensland — most of our trade goes to China,” she said. “Trade means jobs.”

Australian relations with China have been heavily strained since Scott Morrison began pushing for a global inquiry into coronaviru­s.

Beijing’s ambassador warned China could boycott

Australian produce if the prime minister persisted.

China has since blackliste­d four Australian abattoirs and threatened to slap an 80 per cent tariff on barley imports.

Eighteen per cent of Australia’s beef production is shipped to China.

The four meatworks involved account for more than a third of Australian beef exports.

China’s foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said customs officers had detected repeated violations of inspection and quarantine requiremen­ts by a few Australian beef export companies.

“China has decided to suspend, effective immediatel­y, processing four Australian companies’ import declaratio­ns for meat products,” he said.

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann insisted the trade issues were not linked to the push for a coronaviru­s inquiry.

“These are things that you would not even pick up on if we were not in this current climate,” he said.

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