Top Australia, China diplomats meet to discuss trade, human rights - and
pandas
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[March 20, 2024]
By Kirsty Needham and Renju Jose
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia will prepare for a visit by China's Premier
Li Qiang this year, Foreign Minister Penny Wong said after meeting her
Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Canberra for talks she said covered human
rights, tariffs, regional security and pandas.
Australia and China, its largest trading partner, are rebuilding ties
after a period of strained relations which hit a low in 2020 after
Canberra called for an independent investigation into the origin of
COVID-19.
Beijing responded by imposing tariffs on billions of dollars worth of
Australian commodity imports, most of which have been lifted since a
change of government in Canberra two years ago.
"I look forward to speaking frankly with you about Australians detained
in China, human rights, maritime security and safety, as well as
regional and international issues, such as the Pacific, Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and the conflict in the Middle East," Wong said in
her opening remarks.
After the meeting, she addressed Chinese and Australian reporters and
said the two nations would work to prepare for a visit by Li,
emphasizing the importance of face-to-face diplomacy to better
understand each other.
Australia and China would expand dialogue on the Pacific, and on climate
and energy cooperation, Wong said.
"I expressed our serious concern about unsafe conduct at sea, our desire
for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and in our region," she
said, a reference to friction with China's navy in the South China Sea.
While Beijing has made an interim decision to remove Chinese tariffs on
Australian wine - one of the commodities hit by import charges after
2020 - Wong said Australia also wanted blocks lifted on beef and
lobster, and they had discussed nickel market volatility.
Wong said she raised the case of Yang Hengjun, an Australian writer who
was given a suspended death sentence by a Beijing court last month, and
told Wang Australians were shocked by the sentence.
In another sign diplomacy was back on track, Wong said it was likely two
pandas on loan from China since 2009, and due to return this year, would
have their stay in her home city of Adelaide extended.
"We are on a good path there to continued panda presence," she told
reporters after the meeting.
'MUTUAL RESPECT, COMMON GROUND'
According to a Chinese foreign ministry statement, Wang said he hoped
Australia will take measures to uphold the principles of the market
economy and provide a non-discriminatory business environment for
Chinese enterprises in Australia. Canberra screens foreign investment in
key sectors for national security, including critical minerals, and has
blocked some Chinese deals.
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China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets with Australia's Foreign
Affairs Minister Penny Wong at Parliament House, in Canberra, March
20, 2024. Mick Tsikas/AAP/via REUTERS
He highlighted the need for independence, a likely reference to
China's view that Australia's foreign policy is dominated by
Canberra's strategic alliance with the United States, and said
China-Australia relations are on the right track and should not go
backward.
A reference to Australia needing to have an independent foreign
policy that appeared in the Chinese foreign ministry's first Chinese
language statement did not appear in a longer version issued later.
"The most fundamental thing is to insist on mutual respect, the most
crucial thing is to insist on seeking common ground while reserving
differences, the most important thing is to insist on mutual benefit
and win-win situation, and the most valuable thing is to insist on
independence and autonomy," he said according to the transcript.
The last time a Chinese foreign minister visited Australia was in
2017 and Wang's visit signals a thaw in diplomatic ties.
Wang also met with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and held a
private meeting with 11 business, university and think tank
representatives.
The Australia China Business Council's national president David
Olsson said afterwards said the discussion had reflected "a diverse
range of views and voices from the Australian side,
reflecting the conversations that are taking place in Australia
about the future direction of the bilateral relationship".
Rio Tinto iron ore chief Simon Trott said China was the biggest
customer of Australia's iron ore, and ongoing stabilisation of ties
had led to "increasingly positive dialogue between governments and
business leaders of both countries".
Wang will meet former Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating, a
prominent supporter of China who has criticised Australia's AUKUS
nuclear-powered submarine deal with the U.S., on Thursday.
(Reporting by Renju Jose and Kirsty Needham in Sydney and Liz Lee in
Beijing; Editing by Stephen Coates and Lincoln Feast)
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