CHINA’S TOP DIPLOMAT MEETS JOKO, PRABOWO
Both sides express desire for regional peace, repeat calls for Gaza ceasefire
CHINA’S top diplomat met Indonesian President Joko Widodo and President-elect Prabowo Subianto yesterday as Beijing seeks to boost its regional influence.
The meetings come after Prabowo visited Beijing this month, where Chinese President Xi Jinping praised relations with Jakarta, laying out a vision for regional peace as tensions rise between Beijing and other Southeast Asian neighbours, including the Philippines over the disputed South China Sea.
Defence Minister Prabowo stormed to a first-round majority victory in Indonesia’s presidential election in February. He has voiced support for developing closer ties with Beijing.
Wang also met Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi yesterday before visiting Widodo at the presidential palace and then Prabowo at the Defence Ministry.
Retno said Jokowi and Wang expressed their desire for regional peace and stability and repeated calls for a de-escalation and ceasefire in Gaza.
“Mr President emphasised no one would like to see any escalation,” she said after the meeting. “China’s and Indonesia’s position are the same on this issue and Mr President also conveyed his belief that China would also use its influence to prevent escalation.”
Beijing’s top diplomat is set to chair a session of the China-Indonesia High-level Dialogue Cooperation Mechanism today before travelling to Cambodia and Papua New Guinea.
China is one of the biggest sources of foreign direct investment in Indonesia and has poured billions of dollars into projects in the archipelago nation.
Indonesia’s foreign policy is typically neutral and Jakarta walks a delicate diplomatic tightrope in its relations between Beijing and Washington, which are chafing over trade, Ukraine, the Middle East, Taiwan and the South China Sea.
Chinese companies have ploughed money into the extraction of Indonesian natural resources in recent years, particularly the nickel sector where Beijing’s spending has stoked unrest over pay and working conditions.
Jakarta inaugurated Southeast Asia’s first high-speed rail line last year, also a multibillion dollar project backed by Beijing.