WORLD / ASIA-PACIFIC
EU-US Summit Statement goes far beyond norm of bilateral relations
Published: Jun 16, 2021 06:33 PM
A view of the border gate at Calais, after Britain left the European Union (EU) two months ago in Calais, France on March 05, 2021 Photo: VCG

A view of the border gate at Calais, after Britain left the European Union (EU) two months ago in Calais, France on March 05, 2021 Photo: VCG

The Chinese Mission to the European Union on Tuesday expressed opposition to a joint statement issued by leaders of the EU and the US, dismissing it as having gone "far beyond" the norm of developing bilateral relations.

The statement referred to China's Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong, Taiwan, the East and South China Seas, and accused China of "economic coercion" and "spreading disinformation."

"The EU-US Summit Statement has gone far beyond the norm of developing bilateral relations," said a spokesperson for the Chinese mission. "It is filled with outdated Cold War mentality and bloc politics rhetoric. Such attempt to form small circles pitted against one another runs counter to the trend of history and does no good to regional and global peace and stability."

The spokesperson expressed strong discontent with and firm opposition to the references to China in the Statement. Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet-related issues are China's internal affairs. The East and South China Seas concern China's sovereignty and maritime rights and interests. All these issues represent China's fundamental interests, said the spokesperson.

"As for who is imposing unilateral sanctions based on lies and disinformation and who is pressurizing and coercing others to keep its hegemony, the international community sees very clearly and fair-minded people can tell right from wrong," said the spokesperson.

"China is no longer like what it was in the past. The Chinese people have stood up. Intimidation will never work on us. We will stay on the course of peaceful development and at the same time, firmly safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests," added the spokesperson.