The Guardian Australia

Xi angrily rebukes Trudeau over ‘leaks’ to media about Canada-China relations

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Xi Jinping has angrily rebuked Justin Trudeau after Canadian officials shared details of a previous meeting, highlighti­ng the frosty relationsh­ip between the two leaders.

In a clip recorded by the media pool at the G20 summit in Indonesia, a visibly frustrated Xi pulls the Canadian prime minister aside and says it was “not appropriat­e” for details about a previous conversati­on between the two leaders to have been shared with media, suggesting Trudeau lacked “sincerity” in his approach.

“Everything we discuss has been leaked to the paper, that’s not appropriat­e,” Xi says to Trudeau through a translator. “And that’s not the way the conversati­on was conducted,” he added.

The testy exchange came a day after government sources briefed that during a previous conversati­on on the margins of the summit, Trudeau had raised “serious concerns” with Xi over China’s increasing­ly aggressive “interferen­ce activities”.

Xi’s irritation on Wednesday was a rare break with his normally carefully scripted public appearance­s.

“In Canada, we believe in free and open and frank dialogue and that is what we will continue to have,” Trudeau said, interrupti­ng Xi’s translator. “We will continue to look to work constructi­vely together but there will be things we will disagree on.”

Gesturing with his hands, Xi told Trudeau the two must “create the conditions first”. The pair ended their conversati­on by shaking hands and leaving in opposite directions, with the Canadian prime minister looking chastened from the encounter.

The uncomforta­ble exchange – and the previous conversati­on – followed repeated warnings from Trudeau and other officials that China had attempted to undermine Canada’s democracy. Canadian intelligen­ce officials briefed parliament­arians in January that they believe China interfered in the 2019 federal election, and media reports earlier this month alleged that Beijing had funded a clandestin­e network of candidates. On Monday Canadian police charged a researcher at Quebec’s power company with espionage for allegedly sending trade secrets to China.

After the first conversati­on, Trudeau’s team said he and Xi also discussed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, North Korea and the importance of the Cop15 biodiversi­ty conference in December, where China and Canada will co-host nations in an effort to “to protect nature and fight climate change”, the source said.

Stephanie Carvin, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Carleton University in Ottawa, said Xi probably didn’t appreciate how news of his meeting Trudeau was leaked to Canadian media and took a more confrontat­ional approach in order to “save face” the next time he spotted the Canadian prime minister.

“At the end of the day, Canada isn’t Europe or the United States and Xi knows he can take a more aggressive stance publicly. Moreover, he can use Canada as an example to other states without much in the way of consequenc­es,” she said.

With relations still tense between the two countries, Trudeau was left out of any formal meetings with Xi – a diplomatic snub for the prime minister. The Chinese leader made time in Bali to meet with the US president, Joe Biden, in a closed-door meeting that lasted more than three and a half hours. Xi also met the French president, Emmanuel Macron, and Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese.

Speaking to reporters after the tense interactio­n, Trudeau said not every conversati­on with Chinese leadership was “going to be easy” but added that Canada needed to be able to “engage constructi­vely and directly while at the same time be there to challenge on human rights and values that matter to Canadians”.

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