Daily Mail

Is Cameron to blame for UK going soft on China?

- By Kumail Jaffer Political Correspond­ent

Lord Cameron was facing questions last night over the Government’s ‘indefinite’ pausing of sanctions against Chinese officials and firms implicated in human rights abuses.

Former Tory leader Sir Iain duncan Smith revealed internal Cabinet documents had advised ministers of the decision in November – the same month Lord Cameron made his surprise return to Government as Foreign Secretary.

The documents passed to ministers had recommende­d a softer approach to China despite increasing humanitari­an concerns over the treatment of Uyghur Muslims and the crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong.

Just four Chinese officials have been the subject of sanctions – which imposes asset freezes and travel bans – with none handed down in the past three years. The revelation has reignited debate over whether the Foreign office and Lord Cameron – who oversaw a ‘golden era’ of relations with Beijing during his time in No 10 – are taking strong enough action on China.

Sir Iain raised the issue in the Commons yesterday, condemning the Foreign, Commonweal­th and developmen­t office (FCdo) for its ‘terrible decision’. He said: ‘We now know that internal documents show the Foreign office paused targeted sanctions against Chi‘ nese officials in November 2023. And I quote from one of those: “FCdo has paused considerat­ion of this work indefinite­ly”. That is a terrible decision and flies in the face of the evidence.’

Tory MP Alicia Kearns, chairman of the foreign affairs committee, said: ‘To pause considerat­ion of sanctions indefinite­ly is outrageous. It gives Chinese Communist Partycontr­olled businesses carte blanche to conduct repression and indeed be complicit in genocide without ever facing sanctions.’

Luke de Pulford, of the InterParli­amentary Alliance on China, said:

‘If david Cameron’s first act as Foreign Secretary was to pause sanctions against China, he should be hauled before Parliament to explain himself.’

Sir Iain became one of five Tory MPs sanctioned by Beijing after he raised its treatment of Uyghur Muslims in the Commons in 2021.

Prime Minister rishi Sunak has repeatedly said the UK will not return to the close relationsh­ip pursued by Lord Cameron as PM as ‘the China of today is not the China he dealt with a decade ago’.

A Labour spokesman said: ‘In the same month Sunak appointed the architect of the “golden era” policy to run foreign policy, the Government secretly paused sanctions considerat­ions against Chinese firms and officials for human rights abuses without offering any rationale. It is baffling the FCdo made the decision but failed to communicat­e it to the many MPs and campaigner­s calling for sanctions.’

Foreign office minister Andrew Mitchell declined to comment.

That is a terrible decision’

 ?? ?? Questions: Lord Cameron
Questions: Lord Cameron

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