Australian PM takes 'goodwill' into meeting with China's Xi

There are no preconditions on this discussion, Albanese said.The meeting marks a major reset in a bilateral relationship that plumbed new depths under the nine-year rule of Australias previous conservative government.A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said that improved ties would serve the fundamental interests of both countries, but did not confirm the meeting.We hope Australia will ...


PTI | Canberra | Updated: 14-11-2022 15:28 IST | Created: 14-11-2022 15:10 IST
Australian PM takes 'goodwill' into meeting with China's Xi
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (File Image) Image Credit: ANI
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Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday he will soon meet Chinese President Xi Jinping for the first face-to-face talks between the nations' leaders in five years.

Albanese said he would meet Xi on Tuesday on the Indonesian island of Bali on the sidelines of the G-20 summit.

Albanese did not answer directly when asked by a reporter in Bali how hopeful he was that the meeting would lead to China changing a series of official and unofficial trade barriers that are costing Australian exporters $13 billion a year.

“We enter this discussion with goodwill. There are no preconditions on this discussion,” Albanese said.

The meeting marks a major reset in a bilateral relationship that plumbed new depths under the nine-year rule of Australia's previous conservative government.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said that improved ties would serve the fundamental interests of both countries, but did not confirm the meeting.

“We hope Australia will ... rebuild mutual trust and push the bilateral relationship back on the right track,” Mao Ning said at a daily briefing in Beijing.

The last Australian prime minister Xi met was Malcolm Turnbull on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, in June 2017.

Within months, China accused Turnbull of undermining mutual trust by announcing new laws that would ban covert foreign interference in Australian domestic politics.

Relations worsened under Turnbull's successor Scott Morrison, when his administration called for an independent inquiry into the origins of and international responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Beijing's major gripe remains Australia's ban on Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei's involvement in Australian 5G networks on national security grounds.

The Chinese People's Daily English-language newspaper reported last week that “signs of resetting bilateral ties have emerged” since Albanese's centre-left Labour Party came to power in May.

Beijing immediately lifted a ban on minister-to-minister contacts.

The Xi meeting was confirmed after Albanese spoke briefly on Saturday with China's Premier Li Keqiang at a dinner in Cambodia.

China's state-run Xinhua News Agency said Li told Albanese “China is ready to meet Australia half way” in repairing the tattered relationship.

Asked about Li's comment, Albanese said on Monday: “Australia will put forward our own position.”

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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