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		Xi makes a case for free trade as he tours Southeast Asia
		[April 15, 2025]  By 
		HUIZHONG WU 
		BANGKOK (AP) — China's Xi is making the case for free trade as he tours 
		Southeast Asia this week, presenting China as a source of “stability and 
		certainty."
 On Monday, he was welcomed to Hanoi with pomp and ceremony by Vietnam's 
		President Luong Cuong.
 
 He arrived in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia's capital, later Tuesday, for a 
		three-day visit and will end his tour with a stop in Cambodia.
 
 In Hanoi, Xi had a meeting with Vietnam’s Communist Party General 
		Secretary To Lam, where he said the two countries “have brought the 
		world valuable stability and certainty” in a “turbulent world.” He also 
		paid respects at the mausoleum of Ho Chi Minh, the founder of the 
		Vietnamese Communist Party.
 
 “As beneficiaries of economic globalization, both China and Vietnam 
		should strengthen strategic resolve, jointly oppose unilateral bullying 
		acts, uphold the global free trade system, and keep global industrial 
		and supply chains stable,” he added, according to a statement from 
		China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
 
 China and Vietnam signed a series of memorandums on cooperation in 
		supply chains and a joint railway project, and Xi also promised greater 
		access for Vietnamese agricultural exports to China, although few 
		details were made public about the agreements.
 
 U.S. President Donald Trump complained about the meeting, which comes 
		days after his tariffs upended global markets and left governments 
		across the world scrambling. Reacting to the meeting Monday, Trump said 
		China and Vietnam were trying “to figure out how do we screw the United 
		States of America.”
 
		
		 
		In Malaysia, Xi is expected to discuss a free trade agreement between 
		China and 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nation, as Malaysia 
		is chair of the association this year. Xi will meet with King Sultan 
		Ibrahim on Wednesday morning and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim later in 
		the day.
 ASEAN Secretary-General Kao Kim Hourn told Chinese state media that the 
		agreement will eliminate many tariffs between China and the bloc's 
		members. "We will bring more tariffs down to zero in many cases, and 
		then expand to all the areas,” he said in an interview with CGTN, the 
		state broadcaster's English channel.
 
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            Chinese President Xi Jinping, center, walks with Vietnam's Communist 
			Party General Secretary To Lam, right, as he lays a wreath at the Ho 
			Chi Minh Mausoleum during his visit to Hanoi, Vietnam, Tuesday, 
			April 15, 2025. (Athit Perawongmetha/Pool Photo via AP) 
            
			 Malaysia is home to several Belt and 
			Road Initiative projects, including a $11.2 billion Chinese railway 
			project. China is also its largest trading partner and a top source 
			of foreign direct investment.
 Xi's tour was likely planned before the tariff announcements had 
			disrupted the global economy.
 
 “From the Chinese perspective, it’s mostly about ensuring China’s 
			influence in the region remains strong and vibrant, with Southeast 
			Asia being China’s major trading partner,” said Oh Ei Sun, a senior 
			fellow at Singapore's Institute of International Affairs.
 
 However, the trip's timing and the fact that Vietnam, Malaysia, and 
			Cambodia, were all countries impacted by Trump's tariffs, provides 
			Beijing an opportunity to project how it would act as a 
			“responsible” superpower, one of China's long-time stances.
 
 “China can offer a lot to Vietnam and other ASEAN countries during 
			this volatile period,” said Nguyen Thanh Trung, a professor of 
			Vietnamese studies at Fulbright University Vietnam. “I think China 
			can be a leader.”
 
 Anwar called China a “true friend” during Li Qiang’s visit in June 
			and has visited China three times since he took power in November 
			2022.
 
 China's claims to the South China Sea are a point of contention with 
			both Vietnam and Malaysia. Anwar vowed last September that Malaysia 
			will not bow to demands by China to stop its oil and gas exploration 
			in an oil-rich maritime area in the South China Sea as the 
			activities are within the country’s waters.
 ___
 
 AP writer Eileen Ng contributed to this report from Kuala Lumpur, 
			Malaysia.
 
			
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