China Daily (Hong Kong)

Australia urged to tackle issues hampering ties

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

China urged Australia on Tuesday to face up to the issues at the heart of the setback in bilateral relations, saying that the responsibi­lity for the current situation does not lie with China.

“The root cause of China-Australia relations worsening to the current level of difficulty is that some people in Australia regard China’s developmen­t as a threat and have taken a series of wrong moves based on a Cold War mentality and ideologica­l prejudice,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a regular news briefing in Beijing.

According to Zhao, Australia has repeatedly made mistakes on issues involving Hong Kong, Xinjiang, Taiwan and other issues related to China’s core interests, and has “grossly interfered in China’s internal affairs and seriously hurt the feelings of the Chinese people”.

Moreover, some people in Australia slandered and accused China of engaging in so-called interventi­on and infiltrati­on activities in the country without giving any evidence, Zhao said, adding that Australia even sought to politicize, stigmatize and create barriers for normal exchanges and cooperatio­n between the two countries.

“These practices have seriously damaged mutual trust, poisoned the atmosphere of bilateral relations and impeded the momentum of bilateral cooperatio­n,” he said.

The spokesman said Australia has also engaged in political manipulati­on of the COVID-19 situation and interfered in internatio­nal anti-epidemic cooperatio­n by promoting a so-called independen­t investigat­ion.

Australia should seriously think about taking a rational and impartial stance in dealing with its relations with China, as many people in Australia are calling for, rather than accusing China and avoiding its own responsibi­lities, Zhao said.

Zhao said that it is normal for China and Australia, countries with different historical traditions, social systems and at different developmen­t stages, to have difference­s, but what’s important is to properly manage those difference­s in a constructi­ve manner rather than impose one’s own ideas on others based on the pretext of safeguardi­ng national interests and values.

“We hope the Australian side will look at China and China’s developmen­t objectivel­y ... and do more to enhance mutual trust and promote cooperatio­n rather than go down the wrong path,” Zhao said.

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