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Heated protests ahead of China talks

Written by on June 17, 2024

Hundreds of human rights protesters and pro-China supporters gathered outside Parliament House for the arrival of Chinese Premier Li Qiang.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is hosting China’s second-in-command for the annual leaders meeting on Monday, followed by a lunch hosted in the Great Hall of Parliament House.

Premier Li received a ceremonial welcome on the forecourt of Parliament House, with a grinning Mr Albanese shaking his hand on arrival.

Premier Li will also hold discussions with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton later in the day.

In a planned speech, Mr Albanese will tell attendees that Australia will continue to recognise differences between the two countries, reiterating Labor’s formula to manage China relations to “co-operate where we can and disagree where we must.”

Ahead of meetings, a large group of protesters representing the Tibetan and Uyghur communities gathered outside the front lawn of parliament while Falun Gong followers lined Canberra’s main roads.

A large crowd bearing Chinese and Australian flags outside the building jostled with pro-Tibetan activists.

Earlier, opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson urged Mr Albanese to press for the release of imprisoned Chinese-Australian writer and human rights advocate Yang Hengjun, who was handed a suspended death sentence by a Chinese court in February.

“We must do absolutely everything we can because his family are rightly very concerned about his health and wellbeing … he has been unjustly detained for too long,” Senator Paterson told Sky.

It’s expected that Mr Albanese will raise a host of serious matters during his conversation with the Premier, including Mr Hengjun’s medical condition in jail and lingering trade sanctions on Australian exports.

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Later on Monday evening, Premier Li will fly to Perth ahead of a business roundtable on Tuesday followed by a visit to a Chinese-owned lithium plant.

In a statement issued after arriving in Australia, Premier Li said China-Australia relations were “back on track” after a series of “twists and turns, generating tangible benefits to the people of both countries”.

“History has proven that seeking common ground while shelving differences and mutually beneficial co-operation are the valuable experience in growing China-Australia relations and must be upheld and carried forward,” he said

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