The Guardian Australia

Albanese meeting with Chinese premier heralds potential thaw in diplomatic freeze

- Katharine Murphy Political editor in Phnom Penh

Anthony Albanese has met the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, at a gala dinner in Cambodia, opening the first leader-to-leader dialogue between the two countries since 2019.

The Australian prime minister’s office confirmed on Sunday the two leaders had a brief exchange after arriving at the dinner in Phnom Penh. The last conversati­on between the leaders of the two countries occurred when Scott Morrison and Li met in 2019.

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Australia’s prime minister has been signalling for days he is prepared to meet his Chinese counterpar­t, and Albanese escalated that diplomatic signal late on Saturday on the sidelines of the Australia-Asean summit.

Albanese told journalist­s hours before the gala dinner he was prepared to have a conversati­on without “preconditi­ons”.

The prime minister’s office said Albanese and Li exchanged greetings and then spoke briefly about the 50year anniversar­y of diplomatic recognitio­n of the People’s Republic of China by the Labor prime minister Gough Whitlam.

The conversati­on on Saturday sets up the potential for Albanese to meet the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, at the G20 summit in Bali.

The US president, Joe Biden – who is also in Phnom Penh for Sunday’s East Asia Summit – will meet the Chinese president on Monday. It remains unclear whether Albanese will hold a formal bilateral with Xi at the G20.

On Saturday, the prime minister welcomed the looming conversati­on between Biden and Xi. “Out of dialogue comes understand­ing, and we need more [of that] not less, in today’s uncertain world,” Albanese told reporters in Phnom Penh.

Australia’s prime minister noted that Canberra and Beijing’s foreign affairs and defence ministers had already met, despite significan­t irritants in the bilateral relationsh­ip, as part of a cautious diplomatic thaw after Labor’s election victory in May.

“If the leaders of our respective countries have a meeting, that would be positive,” the prime minister said on Saturday. Albanese noted it was “the nature of these events that meetings get locked in at the last minute”.

Albanese has met the Cambodia prime minister Hun Sen and the prime ministers of Laos and Vietnam on the sidelines of Asean. Albanese also had a conversati­on with the US president Joe Biden at Saturday night’s gala dinner.

He mingled with other counterpar­ts, including the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, the Japanese prime minister, Fumio Kishida, and the Indonesian president, Joko Widodo.

 ?? Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/ Getty Images ?? The Australian prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, says he is prepared to have a conversati­on with his Chinese counterpar­t without ‘preconditi­ons’.
Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/ Getty Images The Australian prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, says he is prepared to have a conversati­on with his Chinese counterpar­t without ‘preconditi­ons’.
 ?? Photograph: TVK, Cambodia ?? Anthony Albanese (centre) talks to Chinese premiere, Li Keqiang, at the East Asia summit.
Photograph: TVK, Cambodia Anthony Albanese (centre) talks to Chinese premiere, Li Keqiang, at the East Asia summit.

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