Edmonton Journal

Harper poised for possible visit to China

- JASON FEKETE

Prime Minister Stephen Harper appears set to make another state visit to China in the fall, at a time when some Sino-Canadian experts say Canada is tumbling down the priority list for the Chinese.

It’s believed Harper is planning an official state visit to China in November that would piggyback on the APEC leaders meeting being held in Beijing that month. It will be followed by the G20 summit in Australia a few days later.

The prime minister last visited China in February 2012, although Gov. Gen. David Johnston made an official state visit to the country in October 2013, when he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

More than two years after Xi first ducked an invitation from Harper to visit Canada, the Chinese president still has not visited the country.

Harper is one of the few G8 leaders not to have held an official bilateral meeting with Xi since he became Chinese president early last year, although they’ve held brief chats on the sidelines of meetings of internatio­nal leaders, including the Nuclear Security Summit in March.

“The Canada-China relationsh­ip is not, at this stage, seen as a particular­ly special relationsh­ip. That has diminished, ”said Paul Evans, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the University of British Columbia specializi­ng in Canada-China relations.

“While some elements of the Canada-China relationsh­ip are important to the Chinese, the overall strategic significan­ce of Canada is not what it was a decade ago,” he said.

Canada’s diminishin­g importance to China, relative to other countries, is shaping the relationsh­ip as much as any issue, Evans said.

There a son Canada has now tumbled into what he says is a tier-3 status to the Chinese — behind major superpower­s, but also behind countries such as South Korea and Australia — is because the Conservati­ve government has focused the bilateral relationsh­ip almost exclusivel­y on economic terms, when security, environmen­t and cultural issues are also extremely important.

Evans, who authored a recently released book on Canada-China relations titled Engaging China, has been to the country a few times over the past couple of months and said both sides appear to be gearing up for state visit by Harper.

“It was pretty clear on the Chinese side and some of the noises around the (Canadian) embassy was they were looking forward to a prime ministeria­l visit,” Evans added. “Everybody was gearing up for something bigger than just a flyby visit on the edge of the APEC meeting.”

Canada-Sino experts have noted that a few irritants in the bilateral relationsh­ip could also be contributi­ng to the holdup in Harper conducting official talks with Xi and the Chinese leadership visiting Canada.

Specifical­ly, Canada’s delay in officially enacting the controvers­ial Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) with China is causing some friction.

The Conservati­ve government signed the FIPA with China in September 2012, then tabled it in Parliament for the required 21 sitting days.

The Chinese government has already ratified the deal. In Canada, the agreement can become law once the government issues a cabinet order. However, the Conservati­ves have been holding off on adopting it while a B.C. First Nation’s legal challenge on the agreement winds its way through the courts.

“We are committed to bringing the Canada-China FIPA into force,” said Rudy Husny, spokesman for Internatio­nal Trade Minister Ed Fast.

The Harper government’s decision to implement new barriers to foreign investment by state-owned companies also has irked China, as have delays in constructi­ng new pipelines to get Canadian oil and gas to the West Coast for shipment to Asia.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper is planning an official state visit to China in November, experts say.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Stephen Harper is planning an official state visit to China in November, experts say.

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