Beijing
punishes PM for his meeting with Dalai Lama while French president gets full
state visit treatment
The Guardian, Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent, Friday 26 April 2013
David Cameron's mission to change the focus of British foreign policy by boosting trade links suffered a setback after Downing Street was forced to abandon a trip to China as Beijing punished the prime minister for meeting the Dalai Lama.
The French president, François Hollande, meets his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China. Photograph: Pool/Getty Images |
David Cameron's mission to change the focus of British foreign policy by boosting trade links suffered a setback after Downing Street was forced to abandon a trip to China as Beijing punished the prime minister for meeting the Dalai Lama.
In a blow
to Cameron, who had hoped to hold an annual summit with the Chinese leadership,
the French president François Hollande was on Friday feted in Shanghai on a full state visit a few weeks after the prime minister was due to visit China.
Cameron is
understood to have abandoned the planned trip after Beijing indicated that he
was unlikely to be granted meetings with senior figures. He is now expected to
visit in the autumn, two years after his first and only visit as prime
minister.
Britain
accepts that Beijing is exacting punishment after Cameron met the Dalai Lama,
the spiritual leader of Tibet, at St Paul's Cathedral last May. The meeting,
which was similar to Gordon Brown's discussions with the Dalai Lama at Lambeth
Palace in 2008, was designed to minimise offence in China by showing that
Britain regards him as a spiritual leader. Downing Street has made clear to
Beijing that it accepts Tibet is part of the People's Republic of China.
Government
sources said that tentative plans for the prime minister to visit China this
month were put on hold before his visit to India in February for the simple
reason that the new Chinese leadership only took over in March. Cameron spoke
to Li Keqiang, his new Chinese counterpart, after his appointment.
But the
Guardian understands from diplomatic sources that a visit was firmly placed in
the prime minister's diary for earlier this month. This was abandoned when it
became clear that the prime minister would be denied the access usually granted
to a G8 leader.
Douglas
Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary who has just returned from China, told
the Guardian: "David Cameron came to office claiming he would prioritise
the UK's diplomatic and trade relationship with China, and yet the real
difficulties in relations have now been laid bare. I was in China this week and
it is clear that the new Chinese leadership are focused on the French
president's visit, along with a large number of French companies looking for
business.
"In
the past, UK prime ministers have met with the Dalai Lama without the
deterioration in relations with China that we are now seeing. For all of their
initial boasts and bluster, the UK government has lacked a strategic or a
joined-up approach to China since it came to office, and that's now
showing."
A No 10
source said: "Of course, as any good diary planner would, we pencil in
early on dates when the prime minister could potentially travel overseas
without going firm on destinations. We decided several weeks ago that we wanted
to visit some European capitals in the time we had earlier this month. When the
prime minister and Premier Li Keqiang spoke in March they looked forward to
meeting in due course."
Officials
said trade with China is still rising and the two countries are on course to
achieve £1bn in bilateral trade by 2015. Exports to China grew 13.4% last year.
But the
decision to abandon the visit is a personal setback for Cameron, who said after
coming to office that he would place trade at the heart of foreign policy, with
a particular emphasis on the so-called Bric countries of Brazil, Russia, India
and China. A visit to India in February fell flat after private complaints that
the prime minister appeared to regard the country as a trading opportunity
rather than an emerging world power.
Hollande
was greeted by Xi Jinping, the new Chinese president, when he arrived in
Beijing with his partner Valerie Trierweiler on Thursday. They agreed to hold
an annual summit – Cameron's original aspiration when he first visited China in
November 2010 – after Hollande said he hoped to build a "multipolar"
world. This is the classic French ambition to ensure the US cannot dominate the
world in a "unipolar" world.
Cui
Hongjian, director of European Studies at the China Institute of International
Studies, a foreign ministry thinktank, told the South China Morning Post that
this message was well received in Beijing. "France sometimes has different
ideas from the US. China may co-operate with France."
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