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Chinese,
British FMs reach broad consensus on deepening ties
BEIJING—Chinese Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi held talks with his British counterpart David
Miliband here Thursday, reaching a broad consensus on advancing
bilateral and international cooperation.
Calling bilateral ties “better than ever”, Yang said China-Britain
relations were facing new opportunities. The two sides should work
together to implement the agreements reached between the two leaders and
deepen mutually beneficial cooperation. Yang said the talks with
Miliband were “constructive” and “productive”. The two sides agreed to
continue to maintain high-level exchange of visits, further promote
political mutual trust, continue to conduct dialogue on human rights and
other areas.
The two countries also pledged to increase trade and the scale of mutual
investment, strengthen cooperation on finance, education, science and
technology, culture and the Olympics and boost youth exchanges, Yang
said. Hailing the remarkable achievements made in China, Miliband
expressed the wish to conduct more cooperation and exchanges with China.
He backed the Beijing Olympics, saying the games should not be used to
pressure Beijing over its human rights record, and a successful Olympics
accorded with the interests of Britain and the world at large. “We
believe that the Olympics are an opportunity to celebrate the progress
that has been achieved in China,” he told reporters after the talks with
Yang.
“From our point of view, engagement, not isolation, is the right way
forward,” he said. Yang and Miliband agreed that the two countries would
work closely on major international and regional issues with regard to
enhancing the U.N.’s role in peacekeeping and reconstruction, promoting
more effective non-proliferation and substantial international efforts
on reducing carbon emissions.
The two sides would promote China-EU cooperation and jointly face the
challenges and opportunities of globalization and early realization of
the U.N. Millennium Development Goals. In the talks that also covered
Darfur, the Iranian nuclear issue and dialogue between developed and
developing countries, the two ministers decided to hold bilateral
high-level African talks later in the year.
In response to questions of democracy in China, Yang said people in
China enjoyed extensive freedom of speech. “No one will get arrested
because he has said human rights were more important than the Olympic
Games. This is impossible,” he said. He said China, like many other
countries, needed to further improve human rights and conduct dialogues
with other countries on the issue on the basis of equality and mutual
respect.
Yang stressed Beijing’s constructive role in Darfur, highlighting its
quick dispatch of peacekeepers and development assistance to Sudan, and
the appointment of a special representative on Darfur. But he warned
outsiders had limited influence with the government there. “Of course,
Darfur in essence is a Sudan issue and an African issue. Neither China
nor Britain is a direct partner so we should respect the views of other
partners,” Yang said.
Beijing was Miliband’s last leg of his first official visit to China
starting on Feb. 24 from Hong Kong. He met with Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao Thursday afternoon, and will deliver a speech at prestigious
Peking University on Friday. His six-day China trip also took him to
Shanghai, a financial hub in the east and Chongqing, a city in southwest
China.
Meanwhile, Visiting British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said here
Thursday that the British government adheres to the one-China policy and
opposes to the proposed “referendum on Taiwan’s UN membership”. Miliband,
briefing the press after the just-concluded talks with Chinese Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi, said the British government has adhered to the
one-China policy since 1972 and still sticks to the this policy at
present.
“We do not support the ‘referendum’ of joining in the United Nations in
the name of Taiwan,” Miliband told reporters. He called on both sides of
the Taiwan Straits to work to reduce tension, which accords the regional
peace and security. Yang Jiechi said in the meeting that the Chinese
side appreciates British government’s stance of opposing the “Taiwan
independence” and the Taiwan authorities’ proposed “referendum on UN
membership”. “The Taiwan authorities are making unscrupulous efforts to
push for ‘Taiwan independence’ at this moment, and it is them who cause
the tension across the Straits,” Yang said.—Xinhua |