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What to expect from historic China visit

Written by on June 15, 2024

Chinese Premier Li Qiang is set to arrive in Australia for a four-day tour including diplomatic talks that are expected to bring good news for the country’s winemakers and panda lovers.

Meanwhile, leaders and national security experts have urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to remain firm in condemning human rights abuses and upholding national security interests.

Mr Li, who is China’s second-in-command, will fly into Adelaide on Saturday where he meet with South Australian winemakers and attend a state lunch with Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Trade Minister Don Farrell.

His visit to the famed wine region comes after China abolished crippling trade tariffs imposed on Australian wine exports between 2020 and 2021.

Mr Farrell hinted that Mr Li’s visit could see China lift its final trade restrictions on crayfish and lobster when asked by reporters earlier this week.

“I’d be very confident that the visit this week will result in a very successful outcome for lobster producers,” he responded.

Mr Li will also visit Adelaide Zoo, where he is expected to extend Australia’s loan period giant pandas Wang Wang and Fu Ni which was due to expire at the end of the year.

He will then travel to Canberra for official talks with Prime Minister Albanese, before flying to Perth for a business roundtable and a visit to a Chinese-owned lithium plant.

ACT police have alerted local citizens over planned traffic disruptions and “protest activity” occurring outside of Parliament House ahead of his arrival on Monday.

The prime minister is expected to raise multiple serious issues during formal talks, including lifting remaining trade sanctions and the death sentence handed to Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun earlier this year.

Mr Albanese said he will also raise an “inappropriate” incident in which a Chinese fighter dropped flares near an Australian navy helicopter in May.

“It was dangerous and should not have happened. It will not happen again. So we will certainly be putting that forward,” he told reporters in Canberra.

Head of policy think tank the Australian Strategic Policy Institute Justin Bassi said the federal government should exercise caution over indulging a focus on panda bears and winemakers as to not encourage a form of “asymmetric power” Beijing seeks to impose on Australia.

“We can’t regard the removal of remaining trade restrictions on lobsters and beef as a gift from China as part of the visit,” Mr Bassi said.

“These unfair actions should never have happened in the first place. If we express any gratitude for the end to malicious activities that should never have happened, Beijing will interpret that as a sign that its previous coercion against us has worked.”

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