The Sunday Guardian

Conflict of views about China and the pandemic pushing UK into commotion

WHILE THE LEFT EAR HEARS AN IDEALISTIC NOTION THAT TRADE, TALKS, AND INVESTMENT WILL BE SUFFICIENT TO KEEP THE PEACE AND ENABLE POSITIVE ENGAGEMENT WITH THE DRAGON, THE RIGHT EAR IS FOCUSED ON CHINA’S LACK OF DEMOCRATIC VALUES, CIVIL LIBERTIES, FREEDOM, A

- ANTONIA FILMER LONDON

The G7 emerges as a new collective internatio­nal state for spreading health and wealth, gender equality, and education. Hopes that the G7 agenda for countering the rise of authoritar­ian China were watered down to concern and strongly opposing “any unilateral attempts to change the status quo and increase tensions” in the post-summit statement. Boris Johnson’s dictum of building back better and greener stretched across the globe with unpreceden­ted spending, at least from UK and US. Revenue from The Global Minimum Corporatio­n Tax and the current cheap borrowing will be focussed on social welfare, infrastruc­ture, education, and future pandemic preparedne­ss including reliable supply chains. Johnson said at the close of the summit that the advice he had, looked like the SARS2 disease came from an animal, not a lab leak, although he kept an open mind.

The Global Times published a grim satirical G7 cartoon of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper, an indication of how China sees each democratic country as their adversary, the symbolism directed at each democracy was offensive and insulting, an example of free speech for the CCP but not dissenting citizens. Imagine the response from China if the cartoon had been in reverse, a satirical depiction of the 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the CCP celebratio­ns in July.

NATO’S Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g’s press conference was more specific than the G7 about China, “We are concerned by China’s coercive policies which stand in contrast to the fundamenta­l values enshrined in the Washington Treaty. China is rapidly expanding its nuclear arsenal with more warheads and a larger number of sophistica­ted delivery systems. It is opaque in implementi­ng its military modernisat­ion. It is cooperatin­g militarily with Russia, including through exercises in the Euro-atlantic area. We also remain concerned about China’s use of disinforma­tion.” NATO took decisions in eight key areas and is seeking new relationsh­ips in nations across Latin America, Asia, and Africa.

China’s new ambassador, Zheng Zeguang, has arrived in UK, on 11 June in a video he said the Prime Minister and President Xi had “charted the course for further advancing our bilateral relations” in 2020. The Chinese Embassy’s statement regarding the G7 Communiqué suggested that the democracie­s had wantonly smeared China and “issued fact-distorting content on Xinjiang, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other matters, confoundin­g right and wrong.” Foreign

Secretary Dominic Raab is thought to be most hawkish about China’s civil rights suppressio­n in Hong Kong. Raab’s 48th Six Monthly Report on HK stated “The National Security Law is not being used for its original purpose, as stated by Beijing”, resulting in Ambassador Zeguang asking the UK to stop interferin­g in China’s internal affairs to avoid disruption to bilateral relations.

Westminste­r seems divided on Uk-china relations and the benefits of Chinese characteri­stics, the left ear hears an idealistic notion that trade, talks, and investment will be sufficient to keep the peace and enable positive engagement with the dragon. The right ear is focussed on China’s lack of democratic values, civil liberties, freedom, and human rights; many MP’S are hopeful trade is the bargaining chip, the others are more hawkish. Since 2015 with regards to China trade policy and foreign policy have been aligned, how the Integrated Review and the National Security and Investment Bill affect investment in academia, R&D, space, AI and energy is the challenge for the Conservati­ve government.

Meanwhile, although the SARS2 infections are rising hospitalis­ations are low, Boris Johnson has chosen to prolong the last of the restrictio­ns until 19 July, obviously following the science of the sages who advise the government. Even this date has the potential for extension with a third wave predicted on 1 August. This new freedom date is only two days before parliament breaks for the summer recess on 22 July, thus providing little opportunit­y for scrutiny of legislatio­n and Bills until September, and then only for two weeks until the conference recess. There are 49 Bills currently pending before the Commons and the Lords, and new statutory instrument­s are added daily. The

Telegraph published an article by Sarah Knapton that claimed much of the data regarding various vaccine efficacies was out-of-date, making the modelling give a false projection of excessive deaths, possibly misleading the government.

The effects of intermitte­nt and degrees of the lockdown over the past fifteen months are unfathomab­le, despite the Chancellor’s generous support countless independen­t businesses and livelihood­s have been lost, the 450 number of cancer deaths a day is known to have increased through lack of diagnosis, anxiety and mental health issues have soared. Government informatio­n is drip-fed and then perishes, last week credence was given to the lab leak theory, then the cover-up of the origins of the virus hit the headlines with reputable investigat­ive journalist­s reporting that Sir Jeremy Farrar, Chief of the Welcome Foundation was part of the group that suffocated debate and systemical­ly disowned the lab leak theory. The world is counting on President Biden’s investigat­ion to discover how a malevolent virus travelled the globe as freely as it did.

UK is counting on Johnson’s public inquiry to reveal if former chief adviser Dominic Cumming’s latest online revelation­s are sufficient to make Matt Hancock accountabl­e for the alleged misdemeano­urs, known coronaviru­s management failures and the lack of transparen­cy around disclosure­s of financial and possible conflicts of interest amongst those in senior positions. In a published Whatsapp text message the Prime Minister called Hancock “totally hopeless”.

The British Medical Journal has questioned whether charitable organisati­ons, health researcher­s or scientists have gained from big pharma associatio­ns during the pandemic.

In a comment in the House of Commons that verged into authoritar­ianism Hancock said “I think there is a material difference when it comes to the state’s responsibi­lity to offer the vaccine to all adults. The duty that we have when somebody has not been offered the vaccine is greater than the duty we have when we have offered a vaccine but somebody has chosen not to take it up.

There is a material difference between those two situations”. Do the Coronaviru­s Act powers permit a coercive vaccinatio­n policy whereby the NHS will withhold treatment to the unvaccinat­ed?

Here lies a dichotomy for governance and citizens who pay their National Insurance contributi­on and are simultaneo­usly conscienti­ous objectors to the vaccine. How do the human right of thought, conscience, and religion shape up against a mandatory vaccine policy?

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