EU Seeks Tougher China Policy, Concerned by Hong Kong Law

Reuters
By Reuters
May 29, 2020Europe
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EU Seeks Tougher China Policy, Concerned by Hong Kong Law
European High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, is seen during a video press conference at the end of International Donors' Conference in Brussels, Belgium, on May 26, 2020. (Olivier Hoslet/Reuters)

BRUSSELS—European Union foreign ministers agreed to toughen their strategy on China on May 29 to counter Beijing’s increasingly assertive diplomacy against a backdrop of concern about China’s new security law for Hong Kong.

Amid European criticism of Beijing’s handling of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus outbreak, EU foreign ministers met via video link for their first discussion before two EU-China summits this year, one expected at the end of June and another in September.

“We need and are ready to have an open and honest dialogue with China,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told a news conference after the meeting, where ministers expressed “grave concern” over China’s plans to curtail freedoms in Hong Kong.

NTD Photo
Hong Kong protesters rally against China’s national security law at Mongkok district in Hong Kong, China, on May 27, 2020. (Billy H.C. Kwok/Getty Images)

“There’s a lack of progress on negotiations (on market access for European companies in China),” said Borrell, who said the bloc would now prepare a new EU strategy document on China.

The EU is trying to find a middle path between U.S.-Chinese rivalry, but the bloc is also divided internally over China, with some countries benefiting from its largesse.

Three senior diplomats said there was increasing frustration with what the EU says is Beijing’s failure to make good on an April 2019 agreement that China reciprocate the broad market access that Chinese companies enjoy in Europe.

Next month, the European Commission, the EU executive, is expected to come forward with guidelines on ways for EU governments to potentially limit China’s access to public tenders in Europe, seen as a way to pressure Beijing.

This week, German ambassadors told their counterparts at two separate meetings that host Germany could delay the summit between European Union leaders and China’s President Xi Jinping in September because of the impasse in investment negotiations.

However, another EU diplomat said Berlin is working on hosting a summit in the town of Leipzig on Sept. 14. A German government spokesman declined to comment. Borrell said the Leipzig summit was “still on the agenda.”

By Robin Emmott

NTD staff contributed to this report.

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