Europe’s diplomats to China stress on human rights, respect

Bloomberg

Leading European diplomats in Beijing stressed their commitment to human rights and appealed to China for mutual respect and understanding following a defiant speech from Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
References to human rights are “foundational matters” and not a geopolitical game, Caroline Wilson, the UK’s ambassador to China, said on a panel discussion on Sunday. China’s attitude is not only assertive, but turning aggressive, “much to our dismay,” Nicolas Chapuis, the European Union’s ambassador said on the same panel.
“Effective multilateralism implies that all nations, big and small, sit at the same table with the same rights, and most importantly, accept peer review in a tolerant and constructive manner,” Chapuis said.
In a sweeping speech that touched on topics from the global pandemic to counter-terrorism, North Korea to the Iran nuclear issue and Taiwan, Wang showcased China’s rising confidence and assertiveness in global affairs, while criticising the US and its allies for grasping to an outdated Cold War mentality. He underscored much of the sentiment from last week’s centennial celebrations speech by President Xi Jinping.
“Today’s China is no longer the same country of 100 years ago,” Wang said at the World Peace Forum organised by
Tsinghua University and the Chinese People’s Institute of Foreign Affairs, a policy group.
Wilson and Chapuis also spoke at the same forum. Those in China who say that rules based on the international order is flawed are behaving as though “multilateral rules had not been negotiated, agreed and for decades accepted by all including China,” Chapuis said.
Attitudes in several European capitals have grown less favorable towards China over a range of diplomatic disputes including alleged human rights abuses in the region of Xinjiang. European lawmakers overwhelmingly approved a resolution in May to withhold ratification of an investment agreement with China in response to sanctions against members of the bloc.
The Italian ambassador to China, Luca Ferrari, said on the Sunday panel that the sanctions have been the “main shadow” on the relationship between Beijing and the EU. He called on China to relook at the sanctions to “come out of this conundrum.”
“The risk, if China does not open is that Europe starts closing up,” he said.
Relations between Beijing and Washington have also remained strained under US President Joe Biden, despite some expectations they would improve once Donald Trump left office.

Biden has been slow to remove the tariffs Trump put in place on Chinese goods as the administration evaluates a new set of policies.
Chinese President Xi Jinping warned the nation’s adversaries to avoid opposing his government, saying in a speech marking the Communist Party’s 100th anniversary that China can no longer be “bullied and abused.” Anyone trying to do that “will surely break their heads on the steel Great Wall built with the blood and flesh of 1.4 billion of Chinese people,” he said.
The first face-to-face talks between China and the U.S. back in March descended into bickering between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Yang Jiechi, a member of the ruling Communist Party’s Politburo.
Washington and Beijing were reportedly discussing a meeting between Blinken and Wang at a during a recent Group of 20 event in Italy, but that never happened. The U.S. was exploring the possibility of a telephone call between Biden and Xi, according to the Financial Times said, but no progress has been reported.
Wang criticized Washington across a range of issues. On Afghanistan, he said the U.S. had created the Afghan issue in the first place. “It should not simply shift the burden on to others and withdraw from the country with the mess left behind unattended,” he said.
The U.S. also needed to reconsider its incessant military threats and pressure on North Korea over the decades and “acknowledge and address Pyongyang’s legitimate concerns,” Wang said.
On the Iranian nuclear issue, Wang said it is most critical for the U.S. to make an earlier decision to rejoin the agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
“The U.S. unilateral withdrawal from the JCPOA and its maximum pressure on Iran are the root causes of the current Iranian nuclear crisis,” said Wang. “As the saying, goes, he who tied the bow should untie it.”
Wang said the world must categorically oppose “bloc” confrontation, citing US efforts in the Indo-Pacific region as an example. “It is the revival of the Cold War mentality and regression of history. It should be swept into the dustbin.”
“Dreaming the old dream of hegemony during the Cold War will not secure a promising future, still less build back a better world,” said Wang.

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