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China extends olive branch, lifting trade ban and flagging Albanese visit - Sydney Morning Herald

The Chinese government has extended an olive branch to Australia, saying it looks forward to hosting Anthony Albanese as soon as possible in Beijing and lifting a trade ban on $600 million worth of Australian imports, in the latest sign of a thaw in the previously frosty relationship.

Brushing off the forced cancellation of next week’s Quad leaders summit in Sydney, Albanese will arrive in Hiroshima on Friday to meet with the leaders of the world’s seven richest economies and hold a stopgap summit with US President Joe Biden and his fellow Quad leaders.

US President Joe Biden has declared “America is not a deadbeat nation” after pulling out of the Quad meeting in Australia.

US President Joe Biden has declared “America is not a deadbeat nation” after pulling out of the Quad meeting in Australia.Credit: Getty

Speaking before leaving for Hiroshima, Biden rejected claims his inability to travel to Australia for the planned Quad summit was a publicity win for China, which has not been invited to the G7.

“No, because we’re still meeting,” he said. “We still have four good allies.”

Declaring that “America is not a deadbeat nation”, Biden said it was imperative for him to return to the US following the G7 summit to help end the nation’s debt ceiling crisis.

Albanese, who will also meet with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Brazilian President Lula da Silva in Hiroshima, said he was honoured to be invited to the summit given Australia is not a member nation.

“Australia stands shoulder to shoulder with the world’s largest advanced-economy liberal democracies, collaborating on challenges confronting the global economy, supply chain resilience, climate and energy, a free and open Indo-Pacific and upholding the international rules-based order,” he said before his departure to Japan.

The leaders at the G7 summit will discuss nuclear weapons, China’s economic coercion, Russia’s war in Ukraine and managing the rapid growth of artificial intelligence technology.

China’s ambassador to Australia Xiao Qian said Beijing’s decision to lift a ban on Australian timber imports showed efforts to repair relations between Australia and its biggest trading partner were beginning to pay off.

China cited quarantine risks as the reason it stopped accepting Australian timber in 2020, a period in which it also restricted imports of Australian wine, barley, beef and coal in what the Australian government believes was a calculated attempt at economic coercion.

Chinese Ambassador to Australia Xiao Qian welcomed the removal of a trade ban on Australian timber.

Chinese Ambassador to Australia Xiao Qian welcomed the removal of a trade ban on Australian timber. Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

“The momentum’s positive,” Xiao told reporters in Canberra when asked about the state of the trade relationship.

“Both sides agree to sit down and talk about differences and engage with each other.

“There are also concerns from the Chinese side about Chinese investment in Australia, Chinese support to Australia, and Chinese projects.”

China’s Foreign Ministry has spent the past week criticising the G7 gathering as a meeting of the world’s elite that wants to impose western restrictions on developing countries.

“If G7 members truly care about economic security, they should ask the US to stop bludgeoning and curbing other countries in the name of national security,” spokesman Wang Wenbin said, accusing Japan of being “obsessed with stoking bloc confrontation”.

Xiao said the Chinese government would welcome Albanese to Beijing to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a time of “mutual convenience” for both leaders.

“I’m looking forward for that to happen as early as possible,” he said.

Trade Minister Don Farrell, who travelled to Beijing last week for meetings with China’s commerce minister, said the removal of the timber import ban was “a great outcome for the Australian forestry sector”.

Trade Minister Don Farrell and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao in Beijing last Friday.

Trade Minister Don Farrell and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao in Beijing last Friday.Credit: DFAT

“Australian timber was one of the outstanding trade impediments discussed with my counterpart in Beijing last week,” he said.

“Any step towards resolving the trade impediments is welcome.

“We look forward to the full resumption of trade for all affected products as soon as possible.”

Australian timber exports to China were worth $600 million in 2019, the year before the trade ban came into effect.

Xiao criticised the Quad grouping of Australia, the United States, Japan and India as a “rich man’s club”, saying: “Personally I don’t think the Quad is a good idea.

“It’s an even worse idea when it’s trying to target China.”

Doubling down on his criticisms of the AUKUS pact as a threat to regional peace and stability, Xiao said: “China was not a threat, is not a threat, will not be a threat in the future to Australia.

“Targeting China as a threat is absolutely unfounded and absolutely unnecessary.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

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2023-05-18 12:30:00Z
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