BSS
  25 May 2022, 12:38

Australia urges China to drop trade tariffs

SYDNEY, May 25, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Australia's economy minister called on China
Wednesday to drop punishing trade tariffs if it wants to thaw frozen
relations, after Beijing sent a message signalling it is ready to improve
ties.

China -- Australia's biggest trading partner -- imposed tariffs and disrupted
more than a dozen key industries, including wine, barley and coal, as
relations deteriorated sharply in the past two years.

Canberra had irked Beijing by calling for an independent probe into the
origins of the coronavirus pandemic and by banning telecoms giant Huawei from
building Australia's 5G network.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said Australia felt the pain of the Chinese trade
squeeze, calling for the measures to be lifted "as soon as possible".

"They are damaging our economy. They are making life harder for some of our
employers and workers here in Australia," he told public broadcaster ABC.

"Obviously, we would like to see those measures lifted. That would be a
really great start, when it comes to how we manage what is a really complex
relationship, a relationship that has become more complex over time."

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang sent a congratulatory note to newly elected Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese earlier this week, the most significant high-level
contact between Beijing and Canberra in at least two years.

Li's letter said China was ready to work with Australia to "review the past,
look into the future" and promote a "comprehensive strategetic partnership",
the state-run Xinhua news agency said Monday.

The prime minister said Australia would respond "appropriately".

- 'Tough on China' -

The Chinese message paves the way for dialogue but the outlook is hard to
predict, said Elena Collinson, a researcher at the University of Technology
Sydney's Australia-China Relations Institute.

"Certainly a reset is not in the offing," she said.

While Australia is demanding an end to Chinese economic punishment,
Canberra's "tough-on-China" stance may make it harder to agree to concessions
Beijing is likely to request, Collinson said.

Australia's treasurer said Canberra would deal in a "considered, sober, non-
partisan way" with China's "more aggressive and more assertive" stance in the
Pacific region.

"The stronger the region is, the more cohesive the region is, the safer it
is, the more prosperous it is," he said.

Australia is worried about Beijing's growing influence in the Pacific region,
including a recent security pact between China and the Solomon Islands.

A leaked draft of the agreement, which has not been made public, includes a
section that would allow Chinese naval deployments to the Solomons -- less
than 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) from Australia.

China's foreign minister, Wang Yi, is set to embark Thursday on a 10-day tour
of Pacific island states, including the Solomon Islands, Fiji and Papua New
Guinea.

Announcing the trip, the Chinese foreign ministry said it would be
"beneficial to the peace, stability and prosperity of the Asia-Pacific
region".

Australia's prime minister attended a "Quad" summit in Tokyo on Tuesday with
the US, Indian and Japanese leaders, who jointly warned against attempts to
"change the status quo by force" in the Asia-Pacific region.

The Solomon Islands government severed ties with Taiwan in September 2019 in
favour of diplomatic relations with China, a switch that unlocked investment
but stoked internal rivalries.