Santa Cruz Sentinel

Australian, New Zealand leaders' talk focuses on China

- By Rod McGuirk

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA >>

Australian and New Zealand prime ministers met Tuesday to talk about China's importance to their national economies, resolving to voice their disagreeme­nts with their most important trading partner that is becoming more assertive in their region.

New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins made Australia the destinatio­n of his first overseas trip as his government's leader since his predecesso­r Jacinda Ardern announced her surprise resignatio­n in January.

The visit to Australia's Parliament House comes two weeks after Hipkins assumed office on Jan. 25. He used a joint press conference with his Australian counterpar­t Anthony Albanese to give an assurance that he was keeping New Zealand's foreign policy direction.

“Our foreign policy position hasn't changed just because there's a change of prime minister,” Hipkins said. “The government foreign policy is the same as it was under Prime Minister Ardern.”

A reporter put to Hipkins that Ardern had been reluctant to stand up against “bad behavior by China” and asked if he was concerned about Chinese coercion in the South Pacific.

“China is an incredibly important partner for New Zealand, a very important trading partner, and a partner in other areas as well,” Hipkins replied. “That doesn't mean there aren't going to be areas where we disagree from time to time, and we'll continue to voice our disagreeme­nts with China when that happens and we'll always continue to strive to strengthen that ongoing relationsh­ip.”

Albanese said Australia's national interests include restoring good trade and economic relations with China.

“Our position on China is clear, that we'll cooperate where we can, we'll disagree where we must and we'll engage in our national interests,” Albanese said.

Albanese's center-left government is rebuilding Australia's trading relationsh­ip with China after bilateral ties plumbed new depths under the previous conservati­ve government's nine years in power.

Chinese and Australian trade ministers on Monday had their first meeting in more than three years in a major step toward normalizin­g relations.

Official and unofficial trade barriers on Australian products including coal, beef, seafood, barley and wood cost Australian exporters 20 billion Australian dollars ($14 billion) a year. The barriers are largely seen as Beijing punishing the previous government for disagreeme­nts including Australian demands for an independen­t inquiry into the origins of and responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Some say New Zealand has avoided such trade retaliatio­n by avoiding criticizin­g China.

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