Australia PM Albanese says visit to China ‘very positive’ for bilateral relations

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

FILE PHOTO: Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to media following a Ministry Meeting, in Melbourne, October 11, 2023. AAP Image/Joel Carrett via REUTERS/File Photo

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is the first Australian leader to visit China since 2016.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

SYDNEY – Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Saturday his much-anticipated visit to China to meet President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang marks a “very positive step” in stabilising strained bilateral ties.

Arriving on Saturday, Mr Albanese will be the first Australian leader to visit China since 2016, part of an effort to patch up relations that had deteriorated over several years due to

disputes over Chinese telecoms firm Huawei,

espionage and Covid-19.

“The fact that it is the first visit in seven years to our major trading partner is a very positive step, and I look forward to constructive discussions and dialogue with President Xi and Premier Li during my visit,” Mr Albanese said in Darwin, the capital of Australia’s Northern Territory.

“It is a result of the patient, calibrated and deliberate approach that we have to the relationship with China.”

Mr Albanese's government has taken credit for stabilising ties with China since coming to office in 2022. China has lifted most

trade blocks imposed in a 2020

diplomatic dispute that cost A$20 billion (S$17.6 billion) in commodity and food exports.

The Australian leader is to attend China’s top imports fair in Shanghai, to be opened by Mr Li, on Sunday. He will meet Mr Xi in Beijing on Monday, where the Prime Minister has said he will raise concerns over rising tensions in the South China Sea.

He said he will also raise the case of Australian writer Yang Hengjun, jailed in Beijing for four years on espionage charges.

“The case needs to be resolved,” Mr Albanese told reporters on Saturday.

He will be joined in Beijing by Foreign Minister Penny Wong before she makes a stopover in Tokyo for talks on the sidelines of a Group of Seven meeting, Ms Wong’s office said. REUTERS

See more on