Wang Yi reassures Cambodia of support
Hun Manet in turn says his country will back Beijing on Taiwan, HK and Xinjiang
China would be Cambodia’s “most reliable friend and the firmest supporter”, regardless of the international environment, Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet amid growing tensions in the Asia-Pacific region.
During the meeting in Phnom Penh on Monday, Wang said China would continue to invest more in Cambodian infrastructure and promote production capacity cooperation, according to China’s foreign ministry.
In response, Hun Manet said Phnom Penh’s China policy had been “consistent”, adding that his country would firmly support China’s position on Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang.
There was no mention of the South China Sea in China’s official readout from the meeting.
Hun Manet added that Phnom Penh would continue to take part in the Belt and Road Initiative, a Beijing-led infrastructure project.
Wang also met Hun Manet’s father, Hun Sen, president of the Senate, who was prime minister for nearly 40 years. Hun Sen reaffirmed that Phnom Penh’s stance towards Beijing remained friendly and unchanged and he called the two countries “close friends and strategic partners”.
After taking office last year, Hun Manet visited China and met President Xi Jinping, sending a clear message that Phnom Penh’s China-friendly policy prevailed despite growing rivalry in the AsiaPacific region related to the South China Sea.
Xi and Hun Manet met twice in September and October last year. Wang met his counterpart, Sok Chenda Sophea, in Beijing in December. Wang’s visit this week also included meeting King Norodom Sihamoni, Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol and Sok Chenda Sophea.
China’s ties with Cambodia remain among the closest of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean). The two have no territorial disputes and Phnom Penh largely depends on China’s trade and investment.
Last year, two-way trade reached US$12.26 billion, a 5 per cent increase compared with 2022, according to Cambodia’s customs and excise department.
The weight China affords Asean relationships was highlighted by Wang’s itinerary – which included stops in Indonesia and Asean observer state Papua New Guinea before his trip to Cambodia – and visits to Beijing by political leaders from Vietnam and Laos this month.
Beijing’s relations with the Philippines have deteriorated as it has drawn closer to Washington amid confrontations in the South China Sea. Other Asean members seek to avoid being caught in the crossfire of the US-China rivalry.
In Washington, there has been concern about China’s involvement in upgrading Cambodia’s Ream naval base after Phnom Penh’s dismantling of a US-built facility at the same base in 2020.