China Daily (Hong Kong)

President, EU leaders to meet via video link

Talks come amid intensive diplomatic engagement between key economies

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping will meet via video link on Monday with European Council President Charles Michel, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the rotating chair of the regional bloc, the Foreign Ministry announced on Wednesday.

The meeting comes amid intensive diplomatic engagement between China and the EU countries amid the COVID-19 pandemic and global economic recession due to the impact of the outbreak.

Xi had a video talk with the first two EU leaders in June, when they and Premier Li Keqiang co-chaired the 22nd China-EU leaders’ meeting via video link. That was the first talk between Xi and the two new EU leaders, who assumed their posts in December. He also had several telephone talks with Merkel after the COVID-19 outbreak this year.

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi concluded his five-nation European tour on Sept 1, which took him to Italy, the Netherland­s, Norway, France and Germany.

Yang Jiechi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, also visited Spain and Greece last week.

Analysts said the upcoming meeting is significan­t not only for the China-EU relationsh­ip, but will also help boost internatio­nal confidence in post-pandemic recovery amid mounting tensions between China and the United States.

In a speech delivered at the French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations on Aug 30, Wang said despite the difference in social systems, China and the EU are meant to be comprehens­ive strategic partners, not systemic rivals.

He called for building a partnershi­p between China and the EU in investment, green and digital economies, multilater­al affairs and countering the pandemic.

China and the EU both advocate multilater­alism and are committed to safeguardi­ng the United Nations-centered internatio­nal system, the internatio­nal order underpinne­d by internatio­nal law, and the World Trade Organizati­on-centered multilater­al trading system, officials said.

During the 8th China-EU HighLevel Trade and Economic Dialogue held via video link at the end of July, both sides recognized major progress made in their negotiatio­ns on a bilateral Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment. They committed to concluding the negotiatio­ns and reaching a high-level agreement within the year.

Yao Ling, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Cooperatio­n, said the positive results of the dialogue demonstrat­ed the common responsibi­lity of China and the EU as significan­t economies and the major driving forces of economic globalizat­ion to create a margin of hope for a global economy impacted by the pandemic as well as unilateral­ism and protection­ism.

This year marks the 45 th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between China and the EU. Due to COVID-19, a series of planned events have had to be reschedule­d. A summit of China and EU countries planned for September in Leipzig, Germany, will be held later. A summit between China and Central and Eastern European countries set for the first half of the year in China was also postponed.

Observers said the global pandemic has become a catalyst for China and the EU to reshape their relationsh­ip, and the huge interests they share will bolster their cooperatio­n in the post-pandemic era.

The EU was China’s biggest trading partner from 2004 to 2019. In the first half of 2020, it became the second largest after the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

Wang said in his speech in France that over the 45 years, “an important experience we have gained is: China and the EU are entirely able to enhance trust through dialogues on an equal footing, achieve win-win outcomes through mutually beneficial cooperatio­n, properly address difference­s through constructi­ve communicat­ions and jointly tackle global challenges through stronger coordinati­on”.

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