Chinese
ambassador Liu Xiaoming declares that Britain now ranks behind Germany and
France among the powers in Europe
The Guardian, Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent, Sunday 15 June 2014
With a date for tea with the Queen in the bag for the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, this week, Beijing decided to place Britain ever so gently in its place.
Remarks by the ambassador show that China likes to remind European countries just who is top dog in the 21st century. Photograph: Wang Zhao/AFP/Getty Images |
With a date for tea with the Queen in the bag for the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, this week, Beijing decided to place Britain ever so gently in its place.
Britain now
ranks behind Germany and France among the pre-eminent powers in Europe, the
Chinese ambassador Liu Xiaoming declared on the eve of the premier's three-day
visit to Britain, which starts on Monday.
The remarks
by the ambassador, who highlighted a series of missed opportunities by Britain,
ranging from the failure to build a third runway at Heathrow to an overly
restrictive visa regime, show the delicate challenge in managing diplomatic
relations with China.
David
Cameron, in common with all his immediate predecessors, believes that Britain
must forge a strong political and economic relationship with a country that is
on course to move ahead of the US as the world's largest economy.
But the
remarks by the ambassador show that China has little time for the usual
diplomatic niceties and likes to remind European countries in general – and one
with such a sensitive colonial past, in particular – just who is top dog in the
21st century.
The prime
minister has faced the same challenge as each of his predecessors since
Margaret Thatcher laid the basis for the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997,
as a special administrative region, in the 1984 Sino-British joint declaration.
Thatcher had initially wanted to hang on to Hong Kong island, which had been
ceded to Britain in perpetuity under the 1842 Treaty of Nanjing. But officials
advised Thatcher that Britain had no ability to challenge China.
More than a
quarter of a century later, Cameron has faced a dilemma of his own, though this
has been on a more modest scale. This was discussed over a Soho dinner among
some of his closest political allies a year ago as he prepared for his second
visit to China which was to be preceded by a visit by George Osborne. The gist
of the dinner was to work out how Britain could tap into the vast economic
opportunities of China while holding firm to its values on human rights.
An internal
Whitehall debate had been under way after China put diplomatic relations with
Britain in the fridge, not the freezer, after Cameron and Nick Clegg met the
Dalai Lama in 2012. Hugo Swire, the Foreign Office minister, urged caution over
the dinner. But Osborne called for a hard-headed approach, saying Britain
needed to throw itself into building the strongest possible relationship with
China.
Needless to
say, the chancellor prevailed. Within months, the prime minister embarked on
his long-delayed visit to China, declaring in the Chinese weekly news magazine
Caixin: "There is no country in the western world more open to Chinese
investment."
Human
rights were on the agenda during Cameron's visit in December as they will be
during Li's visit this week. But all EU countries have devised a formula to
avoid causing too much offence to the Chinese, known as a "human rights
dialogue". Cameron will refer to this dialogue in his meeting with Li,
allowing him to say human rights have been raised without necessarily
discussing the issue in great detail.
Ann Clwyd,
a Labour member of the Commons foreign affairs select committee, says Cameron
should not be afraid to challenge the Chinese. Clwyd says: "I suspect we
don't get the balance right when trade is an issue. And this government is very
hot on trade. But MPs must put pressure on the prime minister to raise the
controversial issues with the Chinese."
All sides
seem resigned to acknowledging the overwhelming economic might of China.
Perhaps change might come from the very top: the Prince of Wales once appeared
to boycott a state banquet for the former president Jiang Zemin, allegedly in
protest at the treatment of the Dalai Lama.
China’s
insistence that Mr Li should meet the Queen is the
second recent example of an
increasingly assertive Beijing (Photo:
Jason Lee/Reuters)
|
Related Article:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.