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Britain seeks closer ties to China's Belt and Road
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 15, 2017


Britain seeks "closer collaboration" with China on its Belt and Road infrastructure project, finance minister Philip Hammond said Friday in Beijing on a trip expected to secure more than �1 billion ($1.34 billion) in deals.

China is one of Britain's largest trading partners, and the relationship has grown in importance as the UK looks forward to its economic future once it leaves the European Union in 2019.

China's Belt and Road infrastructure project seeks to revive ancient trade routes through a massive rail and maritime network via $1 trillion in investments across Asia and Europe.

"I was privileged earlier this year to represent the UK at the first Belt and Road Forum and one of the things we will discuss tonight and tomorrow is the opportunity for closer collaboration in delivering the ambitions of the Belt and Road Initiative," Hammond said as he met with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at Beijing's Great Hall of the People.

Li said that the Chinese people were following developments in the UK and the EU "very closely".

"We believe that no matter how the situation in the UK and Europe may evolve, China will continue to hope that there will be steady and sound growth of China-UK ties and relations between China and Europe," Li said.

Hammond's trip seeks to "establish the next steps for a deeper trade and investment relationship as the UK builds an economy fit for the future", according to a statement from the British treasury.

China and UK proclaimed a "golden era" of Sino-British relations when Chinese President Xi Jinping paid his first state visit to the UK in 2015, during which he enjoyed a glittering banquet at Buckingham Palace hosted by the Queen.

But ties were strained in 2016 when Prime Minister Theresa May, shortly after taking office following the EU referendum, ordered a review of a $22-billion deal to build a Chinese-backed nuclear power point in England.

She subsequently approved the project to build Hinkley Point, Britain's first nuclear plant in a generation, but not before Chinese state media accused the country of suffering from "China-phobia".

TRADE WARS
US says 'litigation-centered' WTO losing focus
Buenos Aires (AFP) Dec 11, 2017
The top US trade representative launched a broadside at the World Trade Organization on Monday, accusing it of losing its focus on trade negotiation and becoming a "litigation-centered" body. "Too often members seem to believe they can gain concessions through lawsuits that they could never get at the negotiating table," Robert Lighthizer told the WTO ministerial conference in Buenos Aires. ... read more

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