The Star Early Edition

EARLY PRESENT

President Xi Jinping to bring more than £30 billion in deals and investment to UK

- Robert Hutton and David Tweed London and Hong Kong

DAVID Cameron said Chinese President Xi Jinping would bring more than £30 billion (R609bn) in deals and investment on his visit to Britain this week, as the prime minister defended himself against charges that he was being too warm towards his visitor.

The deals would create 3 900 jobs in the UK, in sectors including the creative industries, retail, energy, health and technology, financial services, aerospace and education, Cameron’s office said in a statement, without giving further details.

Meanwhile, 5 200 British steel workers face losing their jobs, according to the Trades Union Congress, after a series of plants announced job cuts in the face of cheaper imports, including from China.

Cameron said on Monday that he would raise the issue of dumping of steel on the internatio­nal market with Xi during their meetings.

“Trade and investment between our two nations is growing and our people-to-people links are strong,” Cameron said. “This visit will be an opportunit­y to review all of these things, but also talk about how the UK and China can work together on global issues such as climate change and tackling poverty. It’s a real opportunit­y to deepen our relationsh­ip.”

The UK is striking an accommodat­ive tone after Cameron’s May 2012 meeting with the Dalai Lama plunged the two countries into a two-year diplomatic freeze.

Trade and investment between our two nations is growing and our people-to-people links are strong.

China views the exiled Tibetan religious leader as a separatist and a symbol of Western efforts to weaken the country. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman at the time chastised the UK for “making mistakes again and again”.

“David Cameron paid a very high price in Sino-British relations and it is highly unlikely that the UK will ever be vocal over these issues again,” said Andres Rodriguez, a China historian at the University of Sydney. “Only an American president, a respectabl­e foe in the eyes of the Chinese, can really afford to meet with the Dalai Lama and get away with it.”

Sensitivit­y to China’s politics may explain Cameron’s reluctance to take sides during the pro-democracy protests in Britain’s former colony of Hong Kong last year. One of his few forays into Hong Kong’s politics was to lodge a protest when a group of UK politician­s was prevented from visiting about two weeks before the protests fizzled. – Bloomberg

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 ?? PHOTO: EPA ?? Queen Elizabeth II welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping to Buckingham Palace yesterday. The Chinese leader will bring multibilli­onpound deals and investment on his visit to Britain this week amid controvers­y over job losses from cheap Chinese steel.
PHOTO: EPA Queen Elizabeth II welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping to Buckingham Palace yesterday. The Chinese leader will bring multibilli­onpound deals and investment on his visit to Britain this week amid controvers­y over job losses from cheap Chinese steel.

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