Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Envoy warns against disengagin­g from China

Decoupling from China would lead to lost business

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MONTREAL, Canada (AFP) — Beijing’s ambassador to Canada on Tuesday pushed back at growing calls in the West to disengage from China, saying this would risk unravellin­g globalizat­ion.

Ambassador Cong Peiwu, speaking at the Montreal Council on Foreign Relations, also pitched closer cooperatio­n with Canada — ostensibly an olive branch after two years of frayed diplomatic relations over tit-for-tat arrests of a Huawei executive and two Canadian nationals, or an attempt to hammer a wedge in a US-led alliance taking on Beijing.

“We are worried that because some people here in Western countries are preaching the idea of decoupling (with China),” the ambassador said.

“This is dangerous, because for us, we believe this is the age of globalizat­ion, and for us, we will continue to open up for the outside.”

China, now the world’s second-largest economy, and the West have grown increasing at odds over a wide array of issues, from trade and intellectu­al property to Beijing’s crackdown on Hong Kong and Xinjiang.

Canada in particular has drummed up support from allies to pressure China into releasing its two citizens, former diplomatic Michael Kovrig and businessma­n Michael Spavor.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said the two were “arbitraril­y detained” and tried on “trumped-up” espionage charges.

Cong warned that “decoupling” from China would lead to lost business opportunit­ies and disrupt global supply chains.

“We should be united in fighting against this kind of protection­ism, and also for free trade, and I think that’s another area where China and Canada share at least similar language, so let’s hope that we can (act) together in this regard,” he said.

Cong specifical­ly proposed greater Sino-Canadian cooperatio­n at global forums such as the G20 and on likeminded internatio­nal issues including climate change.

“I think China and Canada can do a lot of things together,” he said, adding: “We have a lot of common interests.”

Meanwhile, he renewed calls for Canada to release Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou, saying Canada must “right this wrong.”

Meng, whose father is Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei, was arrested in December 2018 on a US warrant during a stopover in Vancouver.

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