Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Beijing welcomes Canadian envoy

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BEIJING, China (Global Times) — China said Thursday it has accepted the Canadian government’s appointmen­t of Dominic Barton, a veteran economic adviser, as the country’s new ambassador to China, hoping he will play a positive role in returning bilateral ties to normal.

The news was announced by Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang at a daily briefing on Thursday. Geng also reiterated China’s demand for the immediate release of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou.

“The Canadian side should take full responsibi­lity for the severe challenges that bilateral relations face, and Canada clearly knows the root cause,” Geng said.

Barton, 56, is a Ugandan-born Canadian who has extensive experience in China. He’s also well known for consulting as a global managing partner at the firm, McKinsey & Company.

In 2009, Barton was awarded the Magnolia Gold Prize by the Shanghai government for his outstandin­g contributi­ons to the city’s developmen­t.

The appointmen­t of Barton, who believes in China’s role as a strong engine of global economic growth and is determined to improve bilateral ties, does send a positive signal from the Trudeau government, Liu Dan, a research fellow with the Center for Canadian Studies of Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, told the Global Times.

The Canadian side should take full responsibi­lity for the severe challenges that bilateral relations face, and Canada clearly knows the root cause.

But how much the new ambassador could help improve strained relations remains uncertain, said Liu.

“Barton is expected to present a reasonable, cooperativ­e and peaceful side of China to Canadian politician­s and public, many of whom still have limited knowledge or understand­ing toward a rising China,” Yao Peng, managing deputy director of the Canadian Studies Center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times.

Yao also noted that it’s hard to tell how much Barton could help change the Trudeau government’s policy toward China, and the key to bring bilateral relations back to the right track is to properly handle the case of Meng, a symbolic incident that Chinese suffered injustice and misunderst­anding in the country.

Meng, Huawei’s chief financial officer, was arrested in December 2018 in Canada based on a request from the US. She is now fighting extraditio­n to the US.

Yao noted that the appointmen­t, announced days before Canada’s election at the end of this month, is a sign that the Trudeau government wants to solve the case of Meng and show goodwill toward the Chinese in Canada.

However, the measure is far from enough and more effective measures must be taken to ease Chinese anger and the huge loss suffered by the business community, Yao said.

Geng also confirmed that Cong Peiwu, former director-general the Department of North American and Oceania Affairs of the Foreign Ministry, will take office as China’s new ambassador to Canada.

The new Chinese ambassador is expected to take a tougher stance while presenting rational Chinese voices to Canada, said Yao.

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