> Must say .. diplomacy may yet still win the day.

China's new ambassador says Beijing willing to go 'halfway' to repair 
diplomatic relations with Australia

By political editor Andrew Probyn  Posted 8h ago  
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-24/chinese-ambassador-says-beijing-wants-to-repair-relations/100857142

China's new ambassador says Beijing is willing to go "halfway" in establishing 
better ties with Australia.

Key points:
* China's new ambassador says his appointment is a symbolic reset of relations 
with Australia
* Xiao Qian says China wants to meet Australia "halfway" on opening 
communications
* Diplomatic relations have been poor since Huawei was excluded from 
Australia's 5G network


Xiao Qian, who took up his post a month ago, said his appointment was a 
"symbol" from the Chinese government that it wants to open communication 
channels with the federal government.

"This relationship is very important and this is good for both sides, and now 
we're in a difficult situation," Mr Xiao said.

"But from the Chinese side, we're ready to work together with our Australian 
counterparts to move towards the same direction [with] joint efforts, so we can 
move this relationship back on the right track, back to the right direction."

Mr Xiao was speaking after a ceremony at the Chinese embassy to honour NSW 
senior constable Kelly Foster, who died in January last year attempting to 
rescue a Chinese student, Jennifer Qi, when they were both part of a canyoning 
tour group in the Blue Mountains.

Both women died in the incident.

Senior constable Foster's parents, Terry and Marilyn Foster, were presented 
with the Great Wall Commemorative Medal in recognition of their daughter's 
courage.

The presentation ceremony was the first public event held at the Chinese 
embassy since the start of the COVID pandemic.

Mr Xiao said it was not about politics.

"Today's event is more of a humanitarian event, it's not about politics, not 
about diplomacy.

"It's about people to people friendship, humanitarian spirit, about our 
admiration for Kelly Foster and our respect for the Australian police, their 
dedication and professionalism."

'The diplomatic channel is open': ambassador

Relations between China and Australia have been strained ever since Chinese 
company Huawei was excluded from Australia's 5G network.

Beijing has blamed the Morrison government for antagonistic reports in the 
media and has slapped tariffs or export bans on Australian barley, beef, wine 
and live rock lobster.

The Chinese embassy handed a dossier of 14 grievances to Australian media in 
2020, including Australia's demands for an independent investigation into the 
origins of COVID-19, Australia's "spearheading a crusade" on China's affairs in 
Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang, banning Huawei from the 5G network and blocking 
10 Chinese foreign investment deals across infrastructure, agriculture and 
animal husbandry sectors.

There have been no high-level diplomatic exchanges between China and Australia 
for quite some time.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison last week claimed that Beijing's preferred 
candidate at the next election is Labor leader Anthony Albanese.

Asked by the ABC if it concerned him that the two nations did not currently 
have diplomatic channels at the moment, Mr Xiao said "the diplomatic channel is 
open".

"It was open, it is open today and I think it'll remain open. Being the 
ambassador newly appointed is a symbol from the Chinese side that I'm here to 
communicate with our Australian counterparts [but] the channel is open.

"And I would rather prefer to continue to communicate with our Australian 
government officials through diplomatic channels. There are many things we have 
in mind, there are many things we can discuss.

"And we've just sort of just started engagement myself with various sectors of 
the Australian government. I'm looking forward to future opportunities."

Posted 8h ago

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to