Human rights remain key to EU-China trade relations

Published: 9 December 2008 y., Tuesday

Kinijos vėliava
China is now the third biggest exporter in the world and it has massive business potential for the European Union, but China has a less than exemplary human rights record. So, should the EU compromise its principles in the interest of trade with China?

The head of parliament's China delegation Dirk Sterckx said, “We cannot compromise on principles on human rights and the rule of law. But, at the same time the EU and China have no choice: they have to be each other's trading partners, a large part of the world's economy and development depends on that.”
 
China trade is big business
 
There is no question that EU-China trade relations are big business. China is the EU's second largest trading partner after the US and is China's biggest trading partner with overall trade worth more than €300 billion.
 
However there are problems. Trade barriers cost European business approximately €21 billion a year in lost exports. Counterfeiting and piracy are also a major problem,  with 60% of the counterfeit goods seized by the customs authorities of the EU produced in China. A report in plenary next week asks the Commission, together with the Chinese authorities, to come up with plan to fight counterfeiting.

Human rights remain contentious
 
Human rights remain a big concern. Recent EU activity has annoyed China, notably meetings between European leaders and the Dalai Lama and the awarding of the Parliament's Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought to a Chinese political activist. Hu Jia is currently imprisoned on charges of “inciting subversion of state power”, but will be awarded the prize in absentia on 17 December, during the EP plenary session in Strasbourg.
 
The Dalai Lama visited the EP on 4 December and met French President Nicolas Sarkozy on 6 December, causing the Chinese authorities to call off an EU-summit that was to be held in Lyon on 1 December. In his speech to MEPs, the Dalai Lama said the EU should maintain close relations with China, but quoted a Tibetan saying: “if you are a true friend you will make clear your friend's faults”.  
 
Dutch Christian Democrat Corien Wortmann-Kool, who is drafting a report on trade and economic relations with China said discussion is key. “Europe should discuss the issues of human rights at stake via an open dialogue with China based on mutual respect and commitment to shared values of the international community and not on the basis of intimidation from one side.” 
 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Berlusconi survives confidence vote

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi wins a no-confidence motion in parliament by a margin of only three votes. more »

Snow storm pounds US Midwest

A powerful snow storm is playing havoc with travel plans in the US Midwest as more than 2,000 flights are canceled in Chicago. more »

Third EU-Africa summit: MEPs call for an EU law on "blood minerals"

The European Parliament backed plans to create an EU law ensuring traceability of imported minerals, as a tool to combat illegal exploitation of conflict minerals in African countries, in a resolution passed on Wednesday. more »

Commissioner Georgieva makes a plea for cholera victims in Haiti

Commissioner Georgieva said “The anti–cholera efforts undertaken before of the post–electoral riots have reduced the daily rate of cholera deaths from 50 on 23th of November to 22 on 4th of December." more »

Passengers return from Artic cruise

Passengers onboard a damaged cruise ship return to safety in Argentina. more »

Civil society needs to play a greater role in EU–Russia relations, says the EESC

In the immediate wake of the successful EU–Russia Summit, the European Economic and Social Committee is discussing its own–initiative opinion on EU‑Russia relations in the presence of Vladimir Chizhov, Russian Ambassador to the EU. more »

UK students protest tuition hike

Students demonstrate on the streets of London, in protest over a that would allow tuition fees to treble. more »

Bomb attack on Lenin statue

A bomb destroys part of a Lenin statue near Saint Petersburg, the latest such attack on a monument to the founder of the Soviet Union. more »

Pollution warning over Ganges

Residents living along the historic Ganges River in eastern India complain water pollution is on the rise. more »

Two held over Israel fire

Israeli police arrest two people on suspicion of starting a huge forest fire through negligence. more »