The Phnom Penh Post

Is London moving away from a globalised UK?

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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has just returned from a trip to Europe principall­y to lobby the US’ European allies to form an “antiChina coalition”.

The day after Pompeo arrived in London, the UK government announced that from next January it would open its citizenshi­p doors to three million Hong Kong residents who are British National (Overseas) passport holders. In response, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said China will consider derecognis­ing the BNO passport as a valid travel document because the UK had breached a commitment made in the Sino-British

Joint Declaratio­n, where it promised not to grant BNO passport-holders the right of residence in the UK.

This is not the first time the UK has challenged China’s bottom line. The UK denying Huawei access to its 5G infrastruc­ture can partly be explained by economic factors, but its unilateral announceme­nt to suspend an extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong and its playing the BNO card have seriously betrayed its commitment to the joint declaratio­n and exposed its ulterior motives for gross interferen­ce in China’s internal affairs.

The UK’s recent “anti-China” actions have triggered public speculatio­n over whether it has become a “pawn” in the hands of the US. Does it mean the earlier “golden era” of Sino-British relations, as Boris Johnson once env isaged, has come to an end and t here is a risk of “decoupling” bet ween China and the UK? The Covid19 pandemic has added to the UK’s economic and diplomatic worries. If t he UK, which has ex ited the EU, promotes decoupling from China, that would cause it incalculab­le loss.

The UK denying access to Huawei is inseparabl­e from recent US actions. Ironically, instead of benefiting from yielding to the US’ hegemony, the UK has been told to wait till after the US’ presidenti­al election in November for a free trade deal with Washington. In more bad news for Johnson, the new round of negotiatio­ns with the EU has come to a dead end, meaning it still faces the risk of no deal with the EU.

In the past 20 years, economic exchanges between China and the UK helped deepen bilateral ties in trade, science and technology, investment and education. In response to recent tensions between China and the UK, Liu Xiaoming, China’s ambassador to the UK, said if the UK chooses to decouple from China it would be decoupling from opportunit­ies, growth and the future.

Building the right relationsh­ip with China is vital to enhancing the UK’s global competitiv­eness and maintainin­g its broader interests, and also more in line with the UK’s goal of building what British scholars call a “globalised UK”.

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