Global Times

MOFCOM hopes Australia will promote sound ties

-

China’s Ministry of Commerce ( MOFCOM) on Wednesday said that it hoped that Australia would do more to help bilateral cooperatio­n and mutual trust in line with the spirit of their comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, and promote the sound and stable growth of bilateral ties.

Analysts said the ministry statement sent a clear signal that if Canberra wishes to reverse the current tense China- Australia relations, it should not pay lip service, but have to do more.

The comments were made by Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen when asked by the media when China will stop restrictin­g imports of Australian coal and other goods.

Over the past year, the relationsh­ip between China and Australia worsened leading to a near freeze in bilateral trade. Australia’s Trade Minister Dan Tehan said that his Chinese counterpar­t has not responded to his efforts to reach out, said media reports.

In response, officials from China’s Foreign Ministry said previously that “Australia should show its sincerity if it wants to have talks with China.”

Remarks from the senior official clearly show that China hopes that Australia will take practical actions to correct its mistakes and earnestly implement the principles and regulation­s of the WTO and the bilateral free trade agreement, Yu Lei, chief research fellow at the research center for Pacific island countries at Liaocheng University in Shandong Province, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“In the past 12 years, China has been Australia’s largest trading partner, as well as Australia’s largest export market and source of imports,” Wang, the senior trade official, said on Wednesday.

Last year, when Australia’s global trade was hit by the COVID- 19 pandemic, its total trade volume with China remained steady. Australia’s exports to the world fell 8 percent last year, but exports to China fell less than 3 percent, data showed.

“Thus, China- Australia bilateral economic and trade relations have brought benefits to Australia and also China. We believe that this is a mutually beneficial and win- win relationsh­ip, and this relationsh­ip is worthy of attention and being cherished,” Wang said.

It is very regrettabl­e that some people in Australia have politicali­zed and stigmatize­d Chinese investment­s and normal economic and trade cooperatio­n between the two countries. Some have adopted restrictiv­e and even discrimina­tory measures, which have damaged the atmosphere of bilateral economic and trade cooperatio­n, Wang said.

“We hope that Australia can do more things that are conducive to increasing trust and cooperatio­n, and do more things in line with the spirit of the comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p between the two countries, and promote the sound and stable developmen­t of bilateral economic and trade relations,” he added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China