China's Lithuania blockade hits other EU exports: commissioner by AFP Staff Writers Berlin (AFP) Dec 24, 2021 EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis warned that a Chinese blockade of Lithuania's exports over a dispute about Taiwan was increasingly affecting firms from other EU countries, in an interview published Friday. Dombrovskis told German daily Die Welt that the Commission had been able to verify Lithuanian claims about the blockade. "It causes us concern that we are increasingly getting reports from other member states about blocked imports" by China as well, he said. "Apparently Chinese customs is not processing goods from other EU countries if they contain parts from Lithuania." Dombrovskis said there were now "many cases in which imports from Lithuania and the EU are being stopped at Chinese ports and the number is increasing daily". He said the blockade appeared to affect both large and small shipments. "Given the massive daily trade volume between the EU and China, it's not surprising that the amount is growing fast," he said. Dombrovskis said the Commission was using political and diplomatic channels to try to resolve the dispute and that he had spoken directly with China's EU envoy about the matter. But should those efforts fail, he said his staff was preparing a complaint with the World Trade Organization. "We would prefer an amicable settlement for this problem, that's obvious," he said, adding "we have to be prepared for these efforts being unsuccessful". Last month, China downgraded diplomatic ties with Lithuania and stopped issuing visas there in protest at Vilnius's decision to allow Taiwan to open a representative office under its own name. Beijing baulks at any official use of the word Taiwan lest it lend a sense of international legitimacy to the island, which China considers part of its territory. Several Lithuanian companies and business leaders complained this month that China was blocking their exports as their goods were not clearing customs in the country.
China's SenseTime relists Hong Kong IPO after US blacklisting Hong Kong (AFP) Dec 20, 2021 Chinese artificial intelligence start-up SenseTime said Monday it will press ahead with its Hong Kong listing, a week after it was blacklisted by the United States over accusations of genocide in Xinjiang. An initial listing earlier this month was pulled when the US Treasury announced new sanctions, saying SenseTime's facial recognition programmes were designed in part to be used against Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. On Monday, the company filed a revised listing with t ... read more
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