China Daily Global Weekly

Anti-foreign sanctions law ‘justifiabl­e and necessary’

Legislatio­n allows China to counter ‘acts of bullying’ by some nations, says NPC spokesman

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

A spokesman for the first session of the 14th National People’s Congress on March 4 voiced China’s opposition to “long-arm jurisdicti­on”, reiteratin­g that its anti-foreign sanctions legislatio­n is “justifiabl­e and necessary”.

Wang Chao made the remark at a news conference ahead of the first session of the country’s top legislatur­e, which opened on March 5. He was responding to a question about the draft proposal of the Foreign Relations Law of the People’s Republic of China, which was made public at last year’s NPC session.

Some countries have been abusing the extraterri­torial applicatio­n of their domestic laws, in violation of internatio­nal law, with the aim of suppressin­g foreign entities and individual­s and serving their own interests, Wang said.

“Such acts of bullying are widely criticized in the internatio­nal community as long-arm jurisdicti­on. China stands firmly against such practices,” he added.

In order to counter the containmen­t and suppressio­n attempts and interferen­ce in its internal affairs, China has introduced a number of laws and regulation­s, including the Law on Countering Foreign Sanctions, to block the improper extraterri­torial applicatio­n of foreign laws and measures as well as “other provisions such as the Unreliable Entity List”, the spokesman said in Beijing.

China’s core interests allow no infringeme­nt, and its sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity brook no violation, Wang said. Beijing introduces relevant provisions in law to firmly counter acts that undermine its sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests, and harm the lawful rights and interests of Chinese nationals, he said, adding: “This is both justifiabl­e and necessary.”

While being fully committed to advancing the rule of law in safeguardi­ng national sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests, China attaches great importance to enhancing the legal system with regard to further opening-up, the spokesman said.

The country has always adhered to the basic principles of internatio­nal law and the basic norms governing internatio­nal relations, and it has been working hard to safeguard world peace, promote common developmen­t and foster cooperatio­n with all countries based on the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e, Wang said.

The spokesman unequivoca­lly rejected accusation­s that the Belt and Road Initiative would result in debt risks to partner countries in Africa.

“China is not the largest creditor of Africa, as data from the World Bank shows that nearly three-fourths of Africa’s external debt came from multilater­al financial institutio­ns and commercial creditors,” Wang said, adding that the nation has always been committed to helping African countries ease their debt burden.

China has been actively engaged in the Group of 20 Debt Service Suspension

Initiative and case-by-case debt treatment, and the country has suspended the most debt service payments among G20 members.

Wang emphasized that in carrying out the Belt and Road cooperatio­n, China never attaches any political strings or seeks any selfish political gains.

The BRI, proposed by China in 2013, has become a highly popular global public good and cooperatio­n platform. Over 150 countries and more than 30 internatio­nal organizati­ons have signed the cooperatio­n documents in the past decade, Wang said, adding that China will join hands with all partners to make new progress in high-quality Belt and Road cooperatio­n, and also provide legal safeguards for the cooperatio­n.

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