EU warns China: No business investment deal if sanctions remain

China imposed the sanctions on European officials and institutions in March after the European Union – along with the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States – sanctioned Chinese officials over human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region.

The European Parliament's stance on China's sanctions is likely to delay the ratification of the multibillion-dollar investment accord that was agreed in principle in December and needs lawmakers' approval to take effect [File: Francisco Seco/AP Photo]

The European Parliament warned China on Thursday that it won’t ratify a long-awaited business investment deal as long as sanctions against European Union legislators remain in place.

EU lawmakers adopted a resolution in which they condemned “the baseless and arbitrary sanctions” imposed by Beijing on European individuals and institutions in March.

The European Parliament’s criticism was echoed by European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis, who said after a meeting of EU trade ministers that China’s sanctions haven’t created a favourable environment for a deal to be concluded.

“We cannot see this process of ratification outside of the broader context of EU-China relations,” he said.

The European Parliament said its members view Beijing’s sanctions as “an attack on fundamental freedoms and urge the Chinese authorities to lift these wholly unjustified restrictive measures”.

The text was approved in a 599-30 vote with 58 abstentions.

Among those targeted were five members of the European Parliament: Reinhard Butikofer, Michael Gahler, Raphael Glucksmann, Ilhan Kyuchyuk and Miriam Lexmann.

China made its sanctions move after the EU, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States launched coordinated sanctions against officials in China over human rights abuses in the far western Xinjiang region.

The European Parliament’s hard stance is likely to delay the ratification of the multibillion-dollar investment accord that was agreed in principle in December and needs lawmakers’ approval to take effect.

In addition to the lifting of sanctions, legislators said they will take into account the human rights situation in China when deciding to greenlight the multibillion-dollar deal.

The EU hopes the accord, known as the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI), will help correct an imbalance in market access and create new investment opportunities for European companies in China by ensuring they can compete on an equal footing when operating in the country. EU companies face competition from state-owned Chinese enterprises that may get government support and easier access to financing.

“We were going to tackle the trade imbalance. But if you see what came out over the past months, we have extreme worry about human rights violations, especially if you look at slave labour,” Dutch Foreign Trade Minister Sigrid Kaag said. “And there are many companies investing in Xinjiang and it is unclear how the production happens and if slave labour is being used.”

According to EU figures, China is now the bloc’s second-biggest trading partner behind the US, and the EU is China’s largest trading partner. China and Europe trade on average over one billion euros ($1.2bn) a day.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Wednesday that the agreement is “a balanced, mutually beneficial and win-win agreement, not a gift from one party to the other”.

“Second, China’s sanctions on the relevant EU institutions and personnel who have long maliciously spread lies and false information on Xinjiang issues and seriously damaged China’s sovereignty and interests are necessary to safeguard its national interests,” Zhao said at a regular news briefing Wednesday.

“It is also a necessary, legitimate and just response to the European side’s confrontation with sanctions,” Zhao said. “It is clear cut that who unreasonably provoked troubles first and who was forced to take legitimate response.”

Source: AP