Calgary Herald

EUROPEAN UNION PRESSES CHINA OVER TRADE

- ROBIN EMMOTT AND PHILIP BLENKINSOP

BRUSSELS • The European Union told China on Monday to make good on a promise to open up its economy and warned of “very negative consequenc­es” if Beijing goes ahead with a new security law on Hong Kong that the West says will curtail basic rights.

Speaking after video calls with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and President Xi Jinping, the EU’S chief executive and chairman said they had repeated accusation­s that Beijing has spread disinforma­tion about the coronaviru­s.

“The relationsh­ip between the EU and China is simultaneo­usly one of the most strategica­lly important and one of the most challengin­g that we have,” European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen told a news conference.

European Council president Charles Michel said China was not reciprocat­ing the welcome that Chinese companies receive in Europe.

Calling China a partner and a rival, von der Leyen said Beijing had not followed up on a 2019 deal to allow greater access for European companies in China or drop rules requiring investors to share their know-how in Chinese joint ventures.

Even before the coronaviru­s pandemic worsened Sino-european ties, the EU found itself caught between China and the United States, needing both and reluctant to alienate either.

Li expressed optimism about the relationsh­ip, according to Chinese state media, saying China and the EU are more partners than competitor­s. But the EU wants to see progress on an investment agreement under negotiatio­n since 2014.

EU officials say they want to progress in areas such as autos, biotech and microelect­ronics and see Beijing limit subsidies for state-run firms. Germany has postponed an EU leaders’ summit with Xi in September, citing the coronaviru­s, though diplomats said it was in part because of the impasse.

Michel and von der Leyen said they told Li and Xi of their concerns over China’s security law for Hong Kong, which democracy activists, diplomats and some businesses say will jeopardize its semi-autonomous status and role as a global financial hub.

China’s parliament reacted angrily on Saturday to a resolution by the EU assembly protesting against the security law. “We also conveyed that China risks very negative consequenc­es if it goes forward with imposing this law,” von der Leyen said, without giving details.

“The European Union is in touch with our G7 partners on this topic and we’ve made our position very clear to the Chinese leadership today and urged them to reconsider.”

EU foreign-policy chief Josep Borrell has dismissed the notion of European penalties against Beijing. Borrell said on May 26: “I don’t think sanctions against China are going to be the solution to our problems with China, which are more political and related with strategic issues.”

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