Do
not Isolate China Advises UN Chief as European States Discuss China, Ukraine
and Trade
·
Antonio
Guterres advises China is willing to engage with EU, despite worsening
relations
·
‘It’s
important to know first hand what [Xi’s] position is
on peace in Ukraine,’ says Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez, who confirmed he will
visit Beijing next week
The head of the United
Nations asked European Union leaders on Thursday not to isolate China, saying
that such a strategy could risk Beijing going completely in its own direction.
UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres told the EU that China was willing to engage with it, according to an
EU official familiar with the discussion, despite worsening relations over
recent years.
Bilateral ties have frayed
amid widespread concerns about China’s human rights record, its economic
policies and its rising assertiveness on geopolitical matters.
Guterres referenced an
ongoing debate in European capitals about how to cut dependency on the Chinese
economy – an issue that has engendered a suite of new legislation in Brussels.
European leaders frequently
cite the need to reduce their buying of China’s key commodity exports.
At the Davos Forum in
January, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen laid out concerns
about China “openly encouraging energy-intensive companies in Europe and
elsewhere to relocate all or part of their production”.
“China heavily subsidises
its industry and restricts access to its market for EU companies. We will still
need to work and trade with China – especially when it comes to this
transition. So, we need to focus on de-risking rather than decoupling,” von der
Leyen said.
Guterres tried to assure the
27 leaders that Beijing had a positive view of Europe and wished to maintain
good relations – a message commonly espoused by Chinese officials themselves.
The UN chief was touting
collaboration on climate change – on which he has insisted the West must work
with China.
The exchange came at the
European Council summit in Brussels on Thursday. China was not on the official
agenda for the event but it provided plenty of talking points.
On arriving at the summit,
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez confirmed he would travel to Beijing next
week at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping to mark 50 years of
bilateral relations.
“I think it’s important to
know first hand what his position is on peace in
Ukraine, and to tell him that it is the Ukrainians themselves who will lay down
the conditions for the beginning of this peace, when it arrives,” Sanchez said.
Last July, the South China
Morning Post reported that Sanchez had been invited to Beijing, along with his
counterparts from Germany, France and Italy. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz
visited last year, with French President Emmanuel Macron and Italian Prime
Minister Giorgia Meloni set
to follow in April.
Top EU diplomat Josep Borrell is expected to visit Beijing in mid-April en route to the G7 foreign ministers
summit in Japan, diplomatic sources said.
After the European Council
summit, Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo told
reporters he was “not against the fact that governments go to China, as long as
the message is in line with the sort of agenda that we have”.
“We need to continue to have
a relationship with China. Having a relationship means that you need to talk.
And that means talking about things you agree but also talking about the things
you don’t agree,” De Croo said.
Earlier on Thursday,
multiple national leaders expressed concerns about China’s relationship with
Russia, particularly Chinese President Xi Jinping’s state visit to Moscow this
week.
Latvian Prime Minister Krišjānis Karins said Xi’s visit to Russia was “an eye
opener for Europe”, placing a question mark over Beijing’s role as a potential
peacemaker in Ukraine.
At a closed-door
conversation involving Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, some leaders
fretted about the need to continue exerting influence on China to not become
militarily involved in the conflict that was launched by a Russian invasion of
Ukraine on February 24 last year.
Macron warned that the EU
needed to exert “maximum effort to ensure China is not supporting Russia’s
efforts to wage war”, according to a diplomat privy to the talks.
Luxembourg’s Prime Minister
Xavier Bettel said that while China was “not neutral”,
neither was it “against” Europe. He said the EU needed to be able to sit down
with China, and not “push them towards Russia”.
Later, the discussion turned
to trade, where China also featured heavily. However
an EU official said there were no attempts to “resurrect” the Comprehensive
Agreement on Investment (CAI) – a bilateral pact that has been in the “deep
freeze” since the EU and China exchanged sanctions in March 2021.
Instead, it featured as part
of a broader debate on free-trade deals. Some capitals have grown frustrated at
the EU’s sluggishness in finalising deals, with pacts such as the CAI and a
trade agreement with Mercosur states – Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay
– languishing in limbo amid an inability to secure political backing.