Jakarta Globe, Robin Emmott, Apr 01, 2014
China’s President Xi Jinping reviews the honor guardsduring an official ceremony in Brussels. (Reuters Photo/Laurent Dubrule) |
Brussels.
At the height of the euro zone crisis, a Chinese official quipped that Europe
was being reduced to a “wonderful theme park” for tourists. That view no longer
has much currency as Beijing recalibrate links with the world’s biggest trade
bloc.
Beijing’s
growing realization that China needs strong influence in Europe’s de facto
capital, Brussels, has been cemented by President Xi Jinping’s visit to the
EU’s institutions this week, the first ever by a Chinese leader.
Xi did not
come offering business deals and little of substance came out of a summit on
Monday. But a change in tone from confrontation to cooperation could mark a new
chapter in Sino-European ties, EU officials say.
Nurtured
over the past decade as China and its businesses seek to protect and promote
their interests in Europe, Beijing’s diplomatic charm offensive is being
consolidated by Xi, who became president a year ago with an ambitious reform
agenda.
Gone are
the days when China maintained a low-key embassy focused mainly on Belgium and
the Chinese ambassador would decline invitations to attend lunches, let alone
speak at them.
With her
designer French handbags, China’s new ambassador to the EU, Yang Yanyi, has
become a regular at cocktail parties and talks on EU-China relations since
arriving in January, handing out business cards that even carry her mobile
phone number.
The now
90-strong diplomatic mission to the European Union, housed in a vast former
Hewlett-Packard building, has in recent months opened its doors for families to
try calligraphy and ping-pong. Diplomats have thrown a Chinese new year’s party
with dragon dancers for the Brussels’ diplomatic elite and were instrumental in
organizing the loan of two giant pandas to a Belgian zoo.
Ambassador
Yang even recently charmed her way into the European Parliament’s ‘President
Salon,’ a rooftop hall usually reserved for visiting dignitaries, to promote
Chinese telecoms company Huawei. That was despite EU suspicions that Huawei
owes its success to subsidies Europe says are illegal.
“I have no
illusions that our partnership will be irritant free,” Yang told Reuters. “Disagreements
and disputes are normal, but we can work them out.”
Washington,
Beijing and… Brussels
Such
language was unheard of a year ago, when Beijing and Brussels appeared to be on
the verge of a trade war because of a multi-billion euro dispute over Chinese
solar panel imports, the biggest ever trade row between the two.
While that
case, in which Brussels accused Beijing of trying to corner the European market
with cheap Chinese goods, was resolved amicably, it also reminded China that
Brussels has the power to affect its interests.
Brussels’
glass-and-steel European quarter of diplomatic missions, the European
Commission and the European Parliament, not only makes policy for the bloc’s
500 million citizens but is designed to project Europe’s influence across the
world.
“When it
comes to international regulation and decision-making, there are three cities
in the world that count: Washington, Beijing and Brussels,” said a former
senior U.S. official who has worked in all three capitals.
While
Chinese officials had their doubts during the euro zone’s near-meltdown,
Beijing has taken that message on board.
From
tracking rulings by the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg to decisions on
EU trade policy, Chinese officials and companies are watching closely, learning
the EU’s acronyms, jargon and working practices, and establishing how best to
act.
Whereas
once, Chinese companies kept a low profile and relied on the Ministry of
Commerce to represent their interests, major corporations such as Huawei, the
world’s second largest telecoms equipment firm, now have their own public
relations teams, and others are following suit.
Leading
Chinese media, including state-run news agency Xinhua, the People’s Daily and
China Daily, have an expanding presence to keep track of China’s widespread
involvement with the EU across issues of trade, finance, law and regulation.
Xinhua, for
example, now has 50 journalists accredited to the EU, more than any other news
organization worldwide.
“Once we
moved here, we realized the importance of Brussels because it’s the center of
Europe, with all the capitals linked together,” said Leo Sun, the head of
European public affairs for Huawei, which opened a Brussels office in 2009.
Call off
the news conference
Even
government agencies such as China’s aviation authority use public relations and
lobbying firms in Brussels, while the Ministry of Commerce can act as an
adviser to Chinese companies facing EU trade investigations, helping them to
line up the best consultants to lobby for them.
There are
growing pains however.
EU
officials say the unwillingness of senior Chinese officials to hold news
conferences following high-level meetings in Brussels is a constant source of
conflict because the European Union prides itself on its openness to the media.
Following
one meeting with Chinese ministers in Brussels last year, one EU official made
a point of taking extra questions at a news conference rather than walking his
Chinese counterpart to the car, as the Chinese delegation requested.
The
European Commission also insists flying its best EU interpreters back from
Beijing to Brussels to ensure EU officials are properly translated into Chinese
from English and French at such events to avoid their comments being tampered
with.
Brussels is
also resisting China’s calls for a free-trade agreement with the European Union
because of Beijing’s policy of heavily subsidizing state-owned exporters.
China wants
to be considered a “market economy” — meaning decisions are made based on
supply and demand, not the state — to receive better treatment in trade
disputes.
“There are
serious differences and frictions in the relationship,” said Duncan Freeman, a
political analyst at the Brussels Institute of Contemporary China Studies. “But
these are becoming more normal, which is the way it should be.”
Additional
reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing and Ethan Bilby in Hong Kong
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