Daily Express

China can’t have world on a plate

Kenny couple are gold stars I’d make the write call first

- The Northern Powerhouse

HUGE congratula­tions to my Tatton constituen­ts, the Olympic Games dream couple Laura and Jason Kenny.

With a combined tally of 12 gold medals, if they were a country they would be pretty high up the medals table all by themselves.

Mind you, you might not want to live in their household – no dodging the gym or slobbing out in front of the TV there.

And I wonder how far their competitiv­e streak goes.

Does everything have a timer on it, including changing the bedsheets and washing the dishes? Is there always a race to win, and what lengths would they go to beat the other? Do they hide the other’s trainers before bed, or lock the other’s bike with another padlock to get a head start?

Whether they’re in a couples competitio­n or just soulmates, they make a record-breaking winning team and we’re all hugely proud of them.

They put the great into Great Britain.

IN THIS ever more interconne­cted world, how will democracie­s work with dictatorsh­ips, individual­ism with communism, human freedoms with human suppressio­n?Where is the space for us to peacefully co-exist? Most specifical­ly, what should the UK relationsh­ip be with China?

First of all, one can only admire China’s ability to recover from its own brutal Cultural Revolution. It was a decade of violence from 1966 to 1976, in which more than 1 million people died, 16 million were banished to the countrysid­e, properties were seized, many were imprisoned, humiliated and tortured. In just over 50 years China has taken itself from the wilderness to a global economic powerhouse.

The way China managed to claw its way back from famine and destructio­n was by providing cheap goods to the world. It became a factory for us all.And as we took these cheap goods, China was able to pursue a relentless and expansioni­st agenda, that has taken its power and influence to all parts of the globe.

A visit I took to Liberia back in 2010 with the Royal Society of Medicine exposed the unequal relationsh­ip China had with that west African country – something replicated in many other countries desperate for money, infrastruc­ture and technology.

Liberia, in need of a hospital and train line, sold off its rubber, food and natural resources to China. Many other countries in Africa have followed suit.

So what should our 21st century relationsh­ip with China be like? Will we overlook China’s actions – such as its dismantlin­g of democracy in Hong Kong or its human rights breaches against Uyghurs in Xinjiang – in favour of our own economic and infrastruc­ture needs? Do we put our security concerns about China aside to ensure we have the energy and telecoms infrastruc­ture we desire?

These are the decisions that all government­s have to make in foreign policy when weighing up the national interest, especially where it can fly in the face of the very principles we hold dear.

The US State Department’s most recent survey on human rights, released in March, said that China engages in “arbitrary or unlawful killings”, “forced disappeara­nces”, “politicall­y motivated reprisals outside its country”, “pervasive and intrusive technical surveillan­ce and monitoring, “serious restrictio­ns on free expression­s, press and the internet” and “forced labour and traffickin­g”.

China was the only major economy that grew last year, up 2.3 per cent in 2020 from 2019, driven by exports. It has a long-term vision of expansion, repression and resisting challenge.

BWHEN asked about Netflix drama sensation The Crown, Sarah Ferguson, inset, suggested she would like to be played by Julianne Moore, left, offering to call the producer to make her choice known.

If someone was portraying me in a film, rather than calling the casting director about the most flattering body double, I think that I would sooner be making a beeline for the scriptwrit­er to get the storyline straight first!

EIJING has even reignited the conspiracy that Covid-19 started in the Fort Detrick lab in Maryland, after it rejected the World Health Organizati­on’s proposals for a second investigat­ion into the origins of coronaviru­s in aWuhan lab.

As the UK looks for investment to recover from Covid and takes on the challenges of the future from energy to technical infrastruc­ture, will we stand up for our values and beliefs – or will we take the money and the technology and look the other way?

I don’t believe that we have a right to impose our view of the world on every other country – that has usually led to more problems than it has solved. But I hope we will always be able to be relied upon as a country to make the case for political and economic freedom, even if it upsets a country as powerful as China.

The UK must never allow itself to be cowed by anyone nor make bad decisions out of desperatio­n.

The reason we need a strong economy is so that we can always make principled choices.

 ?? Pictures: GETTY ??
Pictures: GETTY
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom