The Mercury News

EU urges China to move on trade, back off Hong Kong

Officials strike tougher tone with Beijing to resolve lingering issues

- By Lorne Cook

BRUSSELS >> Top European Union officials on Monday pressed China’s leaders to open the country’s markets further to European companies, show stronger leadership in reforming world trade’s governing body and step back from the brink in Hong Kong.

With criticism mounting that the EU has been kowtowing to Beijing, European Council President Charles Michel and EU commission President Ursula von der Leyen attempted to strike a tougher tone than usual, after video talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang.

The 27-nation bloc is China’s biggest trading partner, but also an economic competitor, and as Beijing has become more assertive in recent years, the EU has struggled to balance its commercial interests with a country that it also sees as “a systemic rival.”

“Progress is needed in many areas to re-balance this relationsh­ip, and we made clear that we need to resolve concrete problems,” Michel said, firing off a list of outstandin­g issues like market access, subsidies, regulatory issues, public procuremen­t, the forced transfer of technologi­es and WTO reforms.

No Chinese officials took part in the news con

ference.

Von der Leyen said Brussels and Beijing hope soon to sign an agreement on geographic­al indicators that would protect national producers, but she lamented the general lack of progress, particular­ly on lifting market access barriers, since last year’s EU-China summit.

“We continue to have an unbalanced trade and investment relationsh­ip,” she told reporters. “We need to follow up on these commitment­s urgently. And we also need to have more ambition on the Chinese side in order to conclude negotiatio­ns on an investment agreement.”

In a statement after the meeting, the Europeans expressed “grave concerns” at China’s decision to impose its security law on Hong Kong, saying that Beijing’s actions contravene its internatio­nal commitment­s and “put pressure on the fundamenta­l rights and freedoms of the population.”

They also raised concerns about human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Tibet, as well as reports of people who disappeare­d after expressing their views on China’s handling of the coronaviru­s. The “continued arbitrary detention” of Swedish citizen Gui Minhai and two Canadian citizens – Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor - was also highlighte­d.

“For the European Union, human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms are non-negotiable,” von der Leyen said.

She also raised concerns about a disinforma­tion campaign by China linked to the coronaviru­s, and noted, without elaboratin­g, that “we’ve seen cyber attacks on computing systems, on hospitals, and we know the origin of the cyber attacks. “

While Monday’s video summit did not produce concrete results — no joint statement was issued — the Europeans hope it will boost slowmoving talks on an investment agreement they have been working on at technical level, and build some common ground for tackling thorny political issues at a face-to-face meeting, hopefully late in the year.

The meetings come at a time when China stands accused of trying to influence European officials and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, who also took part in the meetings, has twice denied in recent months that the External Action Service — a kind of EU foreign office that he leads — has bowed to Beijing’s pressure to alter documents.

Von der Leyen described the EU-China relationsh­ip as “not an easy one, but one we’re working on.”

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