Both nations have reached consensus to end their dispute over
barley, they said on Tuesday, with Australia suspending a case
at the World Trade Organization, while China hastens a review of
tariffs on Australian exports.
"Making sure we do diversify our export markets is an important
part of our national resilience," Wong told Sky News in a
television interview.
"And the government will continue to encourage that because we
want to make sure we have diversified export markets."
Trade worth A$285 billion a year continues with Australia's
major two-way trading partner, while thawing ties see Beijing
wind back impediments placed on a raft of Australian commodity
exports in 2020 amid a diplomatic dispute.
However, it was important to recognise the relationship between
the two nations was "not going back to where we were 15 years
ago", Wong said in media interviews.
"We know that we want a more stable relationship with China, but
we know we're not going to be able to continue to separate our
economic and our strategic relationship," she told Nine's Today
Show.
As China operates as a "great power in the world", it was
inevitable there would be areas where Australia and China did
not have the same interests, she added.
Wong called China's recent military drills around Taiwan "destabilising",
adding, "We would urge de-escalation."
"Australia's position is, very clearly, no unilateral change to
the status quo," she told Sky News in the interview.
Chinese and Australian officials held talks in Canberra on
Wednesday, led by Ma Zhaoxu, China's executive vice minister of
foreign affairs, and Jan Adams, secretary of the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade.
"The talks covered a range of bilateral and international
topics, including trade, consular, human rights, strategic
competition, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine," the department
said in a statement.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and
Raju Gp[alakrishnan)
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