The Borneo Post

China to talk new Silk Road in Australia, no deal expected yet

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BEIJING: China expects positive moves to signing up Australia for its New Silk Road initiative when Premier Li Keqiang visits this week, but two sources familiar with the issues said the Australian government is likely to bide its time before committing.

The plan, officially called the One Belt, One Road, or OBOR, initiative, is a signature foreign and economic policy of Chinese President Xi Jinping, envisionin­g massive infrastruc­ture spending to link China to Asia and beyond.

Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang told reporters on Tuesday there are “many opportunit­ies and space for cooperatio­n” between China and Australia for One Belt, One Road, a subject he said Li would bring up on his Australia visit.

“I believe these discussion­s will have positive results,” Zheng said, without elaboratin­g.

Discussion­s over a potential Belt and Road memorandum of understand­ing began in October last year, while Xi first raised Northern Australia as a potential Belt and Road investment destinatio­n during his visit to Australia in 2014.

“The informatio­n in just the past one or two days is that there will be no memorandum signed as hoped,” one source told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“There will definitely be opportunit­ies for this and further cooperatio­n in future,” the source added, citing a big OBOR summit to be held in May in Beijing or later in the year when Australia and China mark 45 years of diplomatic relations.

But another source said the Australian side was taking a ‘wait-andsee’ approach to gauge how other major Western economies reacted to China’s overtures.

The Australian government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

China is Australia’s biggest trading partner and the two have a wide-ranging free trade deal.

Australia is also a staunch US ally, despite discord between Canberra and the new administra­tion of US President Donald Trump, who has killed off an ambitious regional trade pact the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p, and labelled a refugee swap deal with Australia as ‘dumb’.

Australia has previously drawn criticism from China for running surveillan­ce flights over disputed islands in the South China Sea and called on China to obey internatio­nal norms in the strategic waterway.

Last week while in Singapore, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop suggested China could never reach its full potential unless it embraced democracy.

Asked about Bishop’s comments, Zheng said the two countries have had a successful relationsh­ip over the past 45 years because they both respected each other’s societal and historical difference­s.

“In the future we hope friends in various fields in Australia can uphold this spirit, abandon ‘you win, I lose’ and ideologica­l prejudices,” he said.

Li visits New Zealand after Australia. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Tourists walk through Sydney’s Hyde Park, as St Mary’s Cathedral is seen in the background. China expects positive moves to signing up Australia for its New Silk Road initiative when Premier Li Keqiang visits this week, but two sources familiar with...
Tourists walk through Sydney’s Hyde Park, as St Mary’s Cathedral is seen in the background. China expects positive moves to signing up Australia for its New Silk Road initiative when Premier Li Keqiang visits this week, but two sources familiar with...

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