Forging a post-Brexit future
British Prime Minister Theresa May eyes ‘golden era’ with China.
Beijing: British Prime Minister Theresa May began a visit to China as she tries to strengthen her country’s global trade links before its contentious divorce with the European Union.
May arrived in the central industrial city of Wuhan and will be in the country until Friday in what the Chinese foreign ministry has called a “historic visit”.
She will head to Beijing later to meet Premier Li Keqiang.
“My visit will intensify the ‘Golden Era’ in UK-China relations. The depth of our relationship means we can have frank discussions on all issues,” she said earlier this week.
May is battling criticism of her Brexit strategy back home. The House of Lords is scrutinising a key piece of legislation on quitting the EU as a leaked government report shows only economic downsides to leaving the bloc.
Britain’s ties with China have grown in importance as London contemplates its economic future after it officially leaves the EU in March 2019.
China “is delivering a new source of capital that --with the appropriate safeguards in place -- can help us to invest in the future of our country,” she wrote in a column in the Financial Times.
“Together, that means a stronger
British economy and more and better jobs for British workers.”
May is accompanied by her husband Philip and a delegation of 50 business leaders and organisation representatives, which her office said was “the largest” Britain has ever taken overseas.
May will also take the opportunity to discuss a wide range of other issues, including climate change and North Korea, but she was also under pressure to address the political situation in former colony Hong Kong and human rights abuses in mainland China. China also has high expectations that London will endorse its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a massive infrastructure project aimed at reviving ancient Silk Road trade routes between the East and West and creating greater market access for Chinese companies.