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PM walks in Whitlam’s steps on China’s Great Wall

Albanese and fiancee Jodie Haydon at the Great Wall of China.

Albanese and fiancee Jodie Haydon at the Great Wall of China. Photo: AAP

Retracing the steps of Gough Whitlam atop the Great Wall of China, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has brushed off Chinese concerns about unfair business practices.

He pitched himself on Wednesday as continuing the work of his famous Labor forebear to “build stability and security in the region” through engagement.

Just a day earlier, Albanese and Chinese Premier Li Qiang signed a series of agreements to boost business links as US President Donald Trump upends the global trade order.

Australia and China must deepen economic co-operation given increasing trade frictions elsewhere, Li said after a lavish welcome in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People.

“In recent years, co-operation has encountered headwinds,” he said, adding that it was hard to find two countries with more complementary economies than Australia and China.

But despite the positive dialogue and warm welcome for Albanese on his six-day visit, he can’t deny the fundamental differences in the relationship.

Beijing has chafed the impact of Australia’s stringent foreign investment regime on Chinese businesses.

Li said China would protect the rights of foreign businesses and treat them according to law, in an oblique reference to Australian plans to tear up a Chinese-owned company’s lease of Darwin Port.

“I trust Australia will treat Chinese enterprise fairly and properly resolve issues regarding market access and investment review,” he told a gathering of Australian and Chinese business leaders.

Albanese meets Xi Jinping

Source: AAP

Albanese said restrictions weren’t targeted at China specifically but were an agnostic effort to protect Australia’s national interests.

“We have a case-by-case issue when it comes to foreign investment,” he said at the Wall on Wednesday.

“It is viewed not on the basis of any one country, but on the basis of an objective assessment of our national interest.”

One issue raised by Chinese business leaders was a concern about existing LNG contracts that could be affected if Australia were to unilaterally change the market through a gas reserve.

“We don’t interfere with those sovereign issues when it comes to gas, whether it be for China, for Japan or for the Republic of Korea,” Albanese said.

He next flies to the south-western capital of Chengdu, where he will spruik Australia’s sporting ties with China and meet some pandas.

-AAP

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