Gulf News

Macron eyes ambitious agenda in first official visit to China

FRENCH PRESIDENT PLANS TO SEEK A ‘STRATEGIC PARTNERSHI­P’ WITH BEIJING

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In Mandarin, Emmanuel Macron’s name is rendered “Makelong”, or “the horse vanquishes the dragon” — an encouragin­g image for the French president as he was expected to head to China yesterday hoping to forge closer ties with President Xi Jinping.

During the three-day trip which begins today, Macron plans to seek a “strategic partnershi­p” with Beijing, notably on terrorism and climate change, an official in the president’s office said.

In particular, France is hoping Beijing will join it in playing a decisive role in implementi­ng the Paris accord to fight climate change after the US pullout pledged by President Donald Trump.

Although China is the world’s biggest polluter, it is also the biggest investor in clean energy technologi­es.

Macron also said this week that China had a key leadership role to play in easing the crisis provoked by North Korea’s nuclear programme, following Trump’s escalating war of words with Kim Jong-un.

“The ambition of the Chinese leadership is to persuade the French president to position himself on issues like North Korea as a ‘go-between’, defending ‘dialogue’ against the more aggressive posture of the United States, and to implicitly recognise by his choices the pre-eminence of China in the region,” analyst Valerie Niquet said.

Macron will also ask Beijing to help support the G5 Sahel force being created with forces from Mali, Chad, Burkina Faso, Niger and Mauritania, tasked with fighting jihadist forces spread across an area of desert the size of Europe.

China has already become a key business partner across Africa, with total investment­s reaching $31.6 billion (Dh116 billion) in 2016 in projects including railways, highways, ports and power stations.

They are part of the extensive network of transport links Xi is developing as part of his “One Belt, One Road” initiative for increasing trade.

Mutual confidence

The state visit will be the first by a European leader since China’s Communist Party conference in October, which reinforced Xi’s grip on power as he was formally handed a second term. China has praised Macron’s decision to make it the first Asian nation he visits.

“We hope this visit will reinforce mutual political confidence and strategic communicat­ion,” China’s foreign minister Wang Yi said this week. Macron will be travelling with a delegation of business executives hoping for a bonanza of contracts, including from AccorHotel­s, LVMH, Airbus and BNP Paribas.

“We will be signing an exceptiona­l number of strategic deals, about 50,” the official said, including sales of Airbus planes and Safran jet engines.

State nuclear giant Areva is also negotiatin­g a contract to build a reprocessi­ng site for radioactiv­e waste.

France is pushing to “rebalance” its trade relations with China. Although China is France’s second-biggest supplier of goods, it ranks eighth in terms of the top buyers of French goods.

 ?? AP ?? President Emmanuel Macron observes a minute of silence in front of the plaque commemorat­ing late police officer Ahmad Merabet to mark the third anniversar­y of the attack, in Paris yesterday.
AP President Emmanuel Macron observes a minute of silence in front of the plaque commemorat­ing late police officer Ahmad Merabet to mark the third anniversar­y of the attack, in Paris yesterday.

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