China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Xi: China, EU should take ties to higher level

He tells new European leadership team that two sides must uphold global peace, stability

- By CAO DESHENG in Beijing and CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels Contact the writers at caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

The just-concluded first official meeting between Chinese leaders and the new European Union leadership via video link has demonstrat­ed the commitment of the two major global players to supporting each other in upholding multilater­alism and an open economy for world peace and developmen­t, officials and experts said.

In the virtual meeting with European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Monday, President Xi Jinping called on China and the EU to build a more stable and mature relationsh­ip in the post-COVID-19 era and lift their ties to a new height.

Saying China is “a partner, not a rivalry” to the EU, Xi said there is no conflict of fundamenta­l interests between China and the EU, and cooperatio­n far outweighs competitio­n and consensus far outweighs disagreeme­nt.

He underlined the need for China and the EU to act as two major players to maintain global peace and stability, two major markets to promote global prosperity and developmen­t, and two major civilizati­ons to uphold multilater­alism and improve global governance.

Before the meeting, Premier Li Keqiang co-chaired the 22nd ChinaEurop­ean Union leaders’ meeting with Michel and von der Leyen via video link.

The China-EU leaders’ meeting had a comprehens­ive agenda addressing bilateral relations, regional and internatio­nal issues, the COVID-19 pandemic and economic recovery.

Wang Lutong, director-general of the European Affairs Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the meeting produced a series of important consensuse­s between the Chinese and EU leaders that “fully demonstrat­e the strategic, comprehens­ive and mutually beneficial nature of the China-EU relationsh­ip”.

As one of the most important outcomes of the meeting, the Chinese and EU leaders agreed to conclude the negotiatio­ns on a “comprehens­ive, balanced and high-level” bilateral investment agreement sometime this year, Wang said, adding that the two sides have held 29 rounds of negotiatio­ns on the agreement and substantia­l progress has been made.

“We are expected to have the 30th round of negotiatio­ns at the end of June,” Wang said. “When we say we will get it done within this year, we will get it done.”

Both agreed to sign the China-EU Agreement on Geographic­al Indication­s in the near future, he said. They also reached consensus on upholding multilater­alism and free trade, opposing unilateral­ism and protection­ism, jointly pushing for global economic recovery and ensuring the stability of global industrial and supply chains.

The EU was China’s biggest trading partner last year, while China was the EU’s second-largest trading partner. However, the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations overtook the EU as China’s largest trading partner in the first three months of this year, as the COVID-19 pandemic hit global trade hard.

A news release issued by the EU after the meeting described the China-EU relationsh­ip as a “complex and vital partnershi­p”. While speaking about EU-China relations, Michel said economic interdepen­dency between the two sides is high, and “we must work together on global challenges like climate action, meeting the (United Nations’) Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals or dealing with COVID-19.”

“Engaging and cooperatin­g with China is both an opportunit­y and necessity,” Michel was quoted by media as saying.

Von der Leyen, while addressing a news conference after the meeting in Brussels on Monday, said it’s “not possible to shape the world of tomorrow without a strong EU-China partnershi­p”. She said it was time to accelerate on the very crucial areas of the relationsh­ip.

Experts said the intensive interactio­ns between China and the EU in the months since the novel coronaviru­s outbreak began have sent a message that cooperatio­n remains the overarchin­g principle in their ties, despite difference­s.

Fraser Cameron, director of the EU-Asia Centre, said the meeting was a good opportunit­y for the new EU leadership team to get to know their Chinese partners and have a frank and open discussion on many areas of agreement, such as the Iranian nuclear issue and climate change, as well as areas of disagreeme­nt, such as market access and industrial subsidies.

“If the strategic partnershi­p is going to bear fruit, it will be important to follow up and achieve concrete results, especially on the trade front,” Cameron said.

Lin Gai, secretary-general of the EU-China Friendship Group in the European Parliament, noted that COVID-19 has damaged the economy of many countries.

“The EU and China need each other more than ever before, especially in medical care, biological sciences, big data, artificial intelligen­ce, food and commoditie­s trade, tourism, culture and other fields,” he said.

“A deeper, broader, more scientific and effective cooperatio­n relationsh­ip will help both sides resume economic developmen­t in the postepidem­ic period,” he said.

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 ?? TOP PHOTO BY WANG YE / XINHUA; OTHER PHOTOS PROVIDED BY XINHUA ?? President Xi Jinping (top) talks from Beijing with European Council President Charles Michel (above left) and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in a videoconfe­rence on Monday.
TOP PHOTO BY WANG YE / XINHUA; OTHER PHOTOS PROVIDED BY XINHUA President Xi Jinping (top) talks from Beijing with European Council President Charles Michel (above left) and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in a videoconfe­rence on Monday.
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