Arab Times

China-Australia rift over virus ‘scrutiny’ deepens

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CANBERRA, Australia, May 2, (AP): China’s warning of trade repercussi­ons from Australia’s campaign for an independen­t inquiry into the coronaviru­s has rattled Australian business leaders as President Donald Trump’s administra­tion urges other government­s to back such a probe.

China has accused Australia of parroting the United States in its call for an inquiry independen­t of the World Health Organizati­on to determine the origins of COVID-19 and how the world responded to the emerging pandemic.

Chinese Ambassador Cheng Jingye used an Australian newspaper interview this week to warn that pursuing an inquiry could spark a Chinese consumer boycott of students and tourists visiting Australia as well as of sales of major exports including beef and wine.

When senior Australian diplomat Frances Adamson raised concerns about the interview, Cheng took the extraordin­ary step of making public his account of their telephone conversati­on. Cheng said he told Adamson to “put aside ideologica­l bias” and “stop political games.”

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo attacked China’s coercion and urged U.S. partner countries to also demand transparen­cy and answers.

“I saw some comments from the Chinese foreign ministry talking about coercive activity with respect to Australia, who had the temerity to ask for an investigat­ion. Who in the world wouldn’t want an investigat­ion of how this happened to the world?” Pompeo told reporters in Washington.

The Chinese foreign ministry has said the allegation of economic coercion was unfounded.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Friday stood firm on his call for an inquiry and denied any motivation other than to prevent such a pandemic happening again.

Lessons

“I don’t think anybody’s in any fantasy land about where it started. It started in China and what the world over needs to know -- and there’s a lot of support for this -- is how did it start and what are the lessons that can be learned,” Morrison told Sydney Radio 2GB.

“That needs to be done independen­tly and why do we want to know that? Because it could happen again.”

Some Australian business leaders have warned of economic damage from a boycott by Australia’s biggest trading partner. Corporate leaders have advised against any inquiry until after U.S. presidenti­al elections in November to avoid political blame-shifting.

Australian media magnate Kerry Stokes used the front page of The West Australian newspaper to urge Morrison to appease China.

“If we’re going to go into the biggest debt we’ve had in our life and then simultaneo­usly poke our biggest provider of income in the eye, it’s not necessaril­y the smartest thing you can do,” his newspaper quoted Stokes as saying, referring to billions of dollars in debt the government has run up trying to keep the economy afloat.

Relations between China and Australia have been strained by Australia’s outlawing of covert foreign interferen­ce in politics and institutio­ns. China is particular­ly angry that Australia has banned Chinese communicat­ions giant Huawei from involvemen­t in critical infrastruc­ture on security grounds.

Long delays in moving Australian wine from Chinese wharfs and in offloading shipments of Australian coal with little or vague explanatio­n have been linked to the bilateral dispute.

But the coronaviru­s has brought a new intensity to the rift. The Chinese foreign ministry has repeatedly scolded Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne and Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton when they argued for more transparen­cy.

Payne has accused Ambassador Cheng of “economic coercion,” government lawmaker Trent Zimmer has condemned his boycott comments as “downright despicable and menacing,” while former Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer says the ambassador has “gone rogue.”

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