Meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Indonesia,
Albanese said they had discussed trade, consular and human
rights issues and had acknowledged their "highly complementary"
economies.
"Australia seeks a stable relationship with China. We have big
differences to manage but we're always going to be better off
when we have dialogue and are able to talk constructively and
respective but also honestly," said Albanese told a news
conference after the meeting, which lasted just over 30 minutes.
The meeting takes place as both countries work to improve
relations overshadowed by disputes over trade, Taiwan, human
rights and the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Xi said there had never been a fundamental conflict of interest
between the two countries, which had great potential for
economic and trade cooperation.
China is Australia’s biggest trading partner, accounting for up
to a third of its roughly A$475 billion ($303 billion) of annual
exports.
"Sino-Australian relations has encountered difficulties in past
years, and this is not what we wanted to see," Xi said,
according to state broadcaster CCTV.
Albanese said he raised the issue of Chinese tariffs and bans on
Australian goods, first levelled in 2020 in response to
Australia's calls for an international inquiry into COVID-19's
origins, but warned against expecting immediate changes.
"I put forward Australia’s position when it comes to the
blockages in our trading relationship," Albanese said.
"It was a positive discussion, we put forward our position. It
was not anticipated that a meeting such as that you get
immediate declarations."
Australia's relations with China began to sour in 2017 when
Australia introduced laws to deal with what it said was Chinese
interference in Australian politics.
Beijing was also angered by Canberra's 2018 decision to ban its
tech giant Huawei from its 5G network on national security
grounds, a decision followed by other Western nations.
Two Australian journalists, Cheng Lei and Yang Hengjun, are in
jail in China awaiting sentences after closed-door national
security trials.
Albanese said China acknowledged that Australia had raised the
issue of the imprisoned journalists but he gave no further
details.
(Reporting by Lewis Jackson and Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing
by Angus MacSwan and Tom Hogue)
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