Global Times

Victoria’s BRI deal benefits local economy

Partnershi­p is fair and legitimate: Foreign Ministry spokespers­on

- By GT staff reporters

Australia’s southeaste­rn state of Victoria should stick to its partnershi­p with China to cooperate on the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), despite noises made by politician­s in Canberra, Chinese analysts said.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo threatened on Sunday that the Trump administra­tion could “disconnect” with Australia over Victoria’s BRI agreement with China.

Victoria is in the final stages of completing the agreement, signed in 2019, but it faces opposition from the Australian Federal government. Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton

Thursday called on Victoria to explain “why it is really the only state in the country that has entered into this agreement.”

Chinese experts said that Victoria state has the legitimate rights over its trade policy, and Canberra will lose face if it forces Victoria to revoke the deal. Australia ran a $58.45 billion trade surplus with China in 2019, in addition to lucrative trade in services.

Australian state government­s own independen­t rights to advance economic and trade projects with foreign markets if they do not involve diplomacy and national defense issues, which is prescribed in Australia’s constituti­on, Liu Qing, director of the department for Asia-Pacific security and cooperatio­n at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times Monday.

“The federal government would violate Australia’s constituti­on if it tries to force Victoria to abandon the [BRI deal].”

Pompeo’s comments had to be watered down by US Ambassador to Australia Arthur Culvahouse. The US ambassador said the US is not aware that Victoria had engaged in any concrete projects under BRI, and no telecommun­ications networks project, which falls into the jurisdicti­on of Australian federal government.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said Monday that China’s BRI cooperatio­n with Victoria is the result of friendly consultati­ons and the partnershi­p is fair and legitimate.

Some Australian politician­s’ accusation­s criticizin­g Victoria’s BRI partnershi­p with China are untenable, which only expose their intentions to ignore the interests of the Australian people and will damage China-Australia relations, Zhao noted.

The US diplomatic threats is the largest stumbling block not only in ChinaAustr­alia political relations, but also in bilateral economic and trade ties, Liu said, noting that the US still hold firm the leash on Australia over investment, national defense and intelligen­ce.

Based on the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement, inked in 2015, the two countries may have signed BRI deal if there has not been political interventi­on from the US side, Liu said.

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