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China President Xi Jinping is making Premier Li Qiang his top messenger on world stage
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China's Premier Li Qiang (right) is becoming President Xi Jinping’s top emissary on the world stage.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING - Three years ago, Chinese Premier Li Qiang took on a role largely stripped of its former glory. Now, in a surprise twist, he is becoming President Xi Jinping’s top emissary on the world stage.
When China’s No. 2 official steps out in Johannesburg at the first Group of 20 (G-20) leaders’ meeting ever held in Africa
It is a role Mr Li debuted at the G-20 leaders’ summit in India two years ago, and then reprised this summer at a Brics top-level gathering in Brazil.
Mr Li’s growing international profile stands out in Chinese politics. While previous premiers were given greater control over steering the world’s second biggest economy, and had memorable moments with foreign dignitaries at home, none represented their president at overseas summits such as the G-20.
The shift comes as Mr Xi dials back his own travel. The 72-year-old has remained in Asia in 2025, with the exception of travelling to Russia – his most geographically curtailed schedule outside Covid-19.
Mr Li’s larger global footprint shows that, despite Mr Xi’s sweeping purge of ministers and top military generals, reliance on his inner circle of loyalists appears to be only growing.
While China’s top leader is delegating abroad, there is no suggestion anyone is being groomed for succession, with Mr Xi widely expected to clinch a fourth term at the next congress in 2027.
“Xi is prioritising summits where China holds outsized influence or are close to home,” said Mr Neil Thomas, a fellow for Chinese politics at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Centre for China Analysis. “As Xi grows older and more secure in his grip on power, he seems increasingly willing to delegate.”
“Li Qiang has effectively become Xi’s primary diplomatic interlocutor,” he added.
Mr Xi’s absence at the G-20 comes as President Donald Trump leads a US boycott of 2025’s event,
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s travel is limited by an International Criminal Court arrest warrant, while the leaders of Argentina and Mexico are also giving it a pass.
In 2023, Mr Xi snubbed proceedings in New Delhi after deadly border clashes complicated ties with India.
His considerations this time are different. China for decades has courted African countries as a counterweight to the US-led world order, lending tens of billions of dollars for infrastructure building that cemented influence.
Mr Xi announced “zero-tariff treatment” for all 53 African nations with diplomatic ties to Beijing in 2025, in stark contrast to Mr Trump’s treatment of the continent.
China was also an early backer of the African Union’s bid to join the G-20, while trade with the continent has been soaring.
African debt and Beijing’s role as a creditor will likely be on the agenda this week, with Mr Li visiting Zambia on his way to the summit – one of the region’s main holders of Chinese loans and home to a recent disaster at a Chinese-owned copper mine.
“I don’t think Xi’s absence suggests that China is neglecting the Global South,” said Dr Yun Sun, director of the China Programme at the Stimson Centre. “Attending large summits with too many different regions and interests represented is less effective or efficient than the smaller China sub-region cooperation mechanisms.”
South Africa’s Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola said at the inaugural Bloomberg Africa Business Summit in Johannesburg this week that his nation was “not disappointed” Mr Xi would not attend.
“It has never even happened in the G-20 itself that you will find 100 per cent attendance of heads of state,” he said. “China, at all the multilateral platforms, has been represented by Premier Li,” he added, noting President Cyril Ramaphosa’s attendance of October’s Asean summit in Malaysia alongside China’s No. 2.
The absence of Mr Trump and Mr Xi could provide an opportunity for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to shape the agenda of the Global South, according to professor of international relations Harsh Pant at King’s College, London.
The US is looking inward, but Mr Xi’s skip is harder to explain given China’s interest in Africa and South Africa’s tilt to Beijing, he said.
“Maybe there are domestic reasons behind the Chinese President’s decision,” Prof Pant added.
While Mr Xi once travelled more than the US president, he now prefers what Beijing calls “home-court diplomacy”.
During a back-to-back military parade and security summit this summer, Mr Xi had high-profile photo opportunities with leaders including Mr Putin, Mr Modi and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un – all without leaving China.
Following those events, the state-run People’s Daily published a feature detailing Mr Xi’s intense six-day schedule, in an apparent attempt to deflect criticisms he looked tired during the pageantry.
“Plenty of leaders are willing to travel to China, and he’d rather have them come to him,” said Bloomberg Economics’ Jennifer Welch. “Over the past few years, China has made very good use of its senior officials in international diplomatic efforts.”
When filling in for Mr Xi, however, Mr Li has not always enjoyed the same level of engagement as his boss, possibly because he is not a full counterpart to other heads of states.
Mr Li stayed low-profile during his first G-20 in India, for example, securing just four bilateral meetings compared with the 11 that Mr Xi held one year earlier.
Still, Mr Li’s platform as an economic official could be useful in keeping talks away from more sensitive diplomatic issues, said associate professor Dylan Loh from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
“Sending Li Qiang will help in some ways ensure the task remains economically focused,” he added. BLOOMBERG

