Friday, 15 Nov 2024

EU lawmakers to freeze China investment deal, Politico says

BRUSSELS (BLOOMBERG) – European Union lawmakers will vote to formally halt an investment agreement with China in response to sanctions against members of the bloc, Politico reported, adding to growing tensions between Brussels and Beijing.

The motion freezing the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment is expected to pass on Thursday (May 20), the news outlet said, citing a draft of the document.

It will demand China lift sanctions before any progress is made on the deal, which took seven years to negotiate, and urge the bloc to better cooperate with the US, Politco reported.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.

Worries over ratification of the EU-China investment deal arose in March, when China retaliated against the US, UK and EU over sanctions related to allegations of human rights abuses in the western region of Xinjiang.

Beijing said at the time it would punish 10 individuals and four entities in the EU, saying the measures “harm China’s sovereignty and interests”.

“The European Parliament action will just put a label on what was already clear since China imposed supersized sanctions on European parliamentarians,” said Mr Joerg Wuttke, head of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

“The CAI took seven years to negotiate. Unfortunately, it might take another seven to be ratified.”

China has been criticised by Western governments over its treatment of Muslim Uighurs and other minorities in Xinjiang.

A panel of UN experts in 2019 said an estimated one million people have been sent to counter-terrorism internment facilities in the region, part of a set of policies the US has said amount to genocide.

China has hit back at the charges, saying it’s addressing a terrorism issue that reached its peak around 2014 when knife-wielding attackers killed and injured dozens of people in a train station in the southwestern city of Kunming.

That incident startled the nation, prompting state media to compare it to the Sept 11 terrorist attacks on the US.

Beijing says its activities in Xinjiang are aimed at building infrastructure, and providing economic and educational opportunities.

The move by the EU lawmakers comes just before President Joe Biden attends a US-EU summit in Brussels in June, marking his first foreign trip as the nation’s leader.

Mr Biden and his European counterparts are set to discuss trade cooperation, the White House has said.

It’s also likely that China will come up in the talks. Beijing’s ties with Europe have been deteriorating recently, with Italy blocking planned acquisitions by Chinese firms and France’s junior minister for European affairs saying his country won’t tolerate “threats and intimidation” from China.

China-EU ties are in a stalemate now because it is politically impossible for either side to lift their sanctions, an academic at a Chinese government-affiliated think tank told Bloomberg last month.

While the EU made a mistake by taking the initiative imposing them, China’s retaliation only added fuel to the fire, said the Chinese academic, who is not authorised to comment publicly due to rules on speaking to foreign media.

The Parliament’s motion also says that any trade agreements with Taiwan “should not be held hostage” by the deal with China, Politico reported.

It also repeats a request that Europe “swiftly finalise a supply-chain business advisory with guidance for companies on the exposure to risk of using Uighur forced labour”, the report said.

“These developments fuel the creeping politicisation of business in China, which increasingly makes European companies in the market worry that they will someday find themselves between an unstoppable force and an immovable object,” Mr Wuttke said.

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