The Borneo Post

Australia hosts China FM, sees ‘stability’ in ties

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CANBERRA: China and Australia claimed to have stabilised longstrain­ed relations after talks in Canberra yesterday, despite evident tensions over a highprofil­e prisoner, trade and a new crackdown in Hong Kong.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Australia for the first time since 2017, a trip designed to draw a line under disputes related to everything from the origins of Covid-19 to military deployment­s.

The meeting was framed by warm words, with Wang saying the two sides had “broken the ice”, and that “mutual trust” and “good momentum” were slowly building.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong praised renewed “stability” in relations and said it was crucial to recognise “how much progress we have made in a short period of time”.

There was even a tacit commitment to extending the Australian sojourn of two giant pandas loaned by China in 2009 — a favourite tool of Beijing diplomacy.

But years of tensions and a fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt about the shape of the AsiaPacifi­c region could not be papered over.

“We discussed the sentencing of Dr Yang Hengjun. I told the foreign minister Australian­s were shocked at the sentence imposed,” Wong told reporters after the meeting.

Jailed Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun — also known as Yang Jun — was in February handed a suspended death sentence after a Beijing court found him guilty of espionage.

He vehemently denies the charges.

Wong also raised concerns about human rights in Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong, where proBeijing lawmakers on Tuesday passed national security reforms that will further criminalis­e dissent.

An Australian foreign ministry official said Wong had warned the reforms would “further erode rights and freedoms”, breach internatio­nal commitment­s and have “far-reaching impacts, including on individual­s in Australia”.

The remarks are unlikely to have gone down well with Wong’s Chinese guest.

Beijing has described similar criticism from Britain, the United States and the European Union as “slandering and smearing”.

As the foreign ministers met, protesters gathered on the lawns of Australia’s parliament, drawing attention to alleged human rights abuses within China.

A small group of demonstrat­ors later clashed with police outside the Chinese embassy, brandishin­g Tibetan flags and shouting ‘free Tibet’ as they rushed towards the building’s front gates.

Australia’s relationsh­ip with China began unravellin­g in 2018, when Canberra excluded telecommun­ications giant Huawei from its 5G network on security grounds and later passed laws on foreign interferen­ce.

Then in 2020, Australia called for an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the origins of Covid-19 — an action China saw as politicall­y motivated.

In response, Beijing slapped trade restrictio­ns on a slew of Australian exports, including barley, beef and wine, while halting its coal imports.

Most of those barriers have been gradually wound back as relations have been repaired.

Wang said a final decision on ending wine tariffs would be made at the end of the month, signalling restrictio­ns could soon be lifted.

Before the trade restrictio­ns were imposed, China was the largest destinatio­n for Australian bottled wine — accounting for 33 per cent of export revenue in 2020, according to Australian government data.

Wong said the talks had also touched on the global nickel market, which has been upended by a surge in exports from Indonesia — enabled by massive Chinese investment­s and a revolution in refining techniques.

Prices have fallen about 40 percent in the past year alone, prompting many once-dominant Australian firms to rethink projects or write down the value of their assets.

Wang later told an AustraliaC­hina business council that common interests between the two countries far outweigh their difference­s.

“China is Australia’s largest trading partner and the biggest customer for our products like iron ore”, said Rio Tinto mining executive and meeting participan­t Simon Trott, welcoming a “stabilisat­ion” of relations.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Wong (right) shaking hands with Wang before their bilateral meeting in Canberra.
— AFP photo Wong (right) shaking hands with Wang before their bilateral meeting in Canberra.

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