Sanctions row threatens EU-China investment deal - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
中欧关系

Sanctions row threatens EU-China investment deal

Diplomatic escalation between Brussels and Beijing deepens uncertainty over treaty
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":13.6,"text":"The EU’s trade policy chief has warned that China’s decision to escalate a sanctions row risks imperilling a market-access deal meant to be the cornerstone of future relations between Brussels and Beijing. "}],[{"start":27.09,"text":"Valdis Dombrovskis, the EU’s trade commissioner, said that the fate of the freshly negotiated EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment — or CAI — was tied up with the diplomatic dispute, which erupted this week. "}],[{"start":42.31,"text":"“China’s retaliatory sanctions are regrettable and unacceptable,” Dombrovskis said. "}],[{"start":48.72,"text":"“The prospects for the CAI’s ratification will depend on how the situation evolves,” he explained. "},{"start":54.974,"text":"“The ratification process cannot be separated from the evolving dynamics of the wider EU-China relationship. ”"}],[{"start":62.71,"text":"The European Commission was already navigating choppy political waters over its decision last year to agree an investment treaty with Beijing — a move that has been attacked by human rights groups as placing the interests of business ahead of fundamental values. "},{"start":77.902,"text":"But the deal’s fate is even more uncertain following China’s decision on Monday to place sanctions on members of the European Parliament, the assembly that must decide whether the deal should ever take effect. "}],[{"start":90.89,"text":"“The EU has been making every effort to foster a balanced, rules-based economic relationship with China, and the CAI was a major step in that direction,” Dombrovskis said. "},{"start":102.044,"text":"“But our trade and economic agenda has European values at its core: pursuing our economic interest goes hand in hand with standing up for our values, including where necessary through sanctions. ”"}],[{"start":null,"text":"

I don’t believe either China or the EU wants this escalated situation.

Iuliu Winkler, MEP
"}],[{"start":114.27,"text":"While the politics of the CAI become ever more complicated, the economic rationale for the EU of concluding it has always been clear. "},{"start":122.749,"text":"It has been a long-term goal of the EU’s policy towards Beijing. "}],[{"start":128.09,"text":"The bulk of the deal, struck at the end of last year, is focused on opening up investment opportunities for EU companies operating on the Chinese market — addressing longstanding complaints about unfair treatment, and warding off the risk of EU firms operating in China at a disadvantage compared with US rivals. "},{"start":147.93200000000002,"text":"Specifically, it offers possibilities for European companies to increase production in promising fields such as electric cars, while eliminating requirements in some sectors to partner with local firms. "}],[{"start":161.47,"text":"But the European Parliament’s large centre-left Socialists and Democrats group has already made clear that ending the sanctions against the parliament is a “precondition” for work on ratifying the investment agreement to advance. "},{"start":174.624,"text":"MEPs point to the political impossibility of the parliament voting through an economic pact with a country actively attacking its members. "}],[{"start":183.1,"text":"Even before the current row, MEPs involved in the process had emphasised that ratification would hinge in part on China providing a “road map” for implementing international conventions against the use of forced labour, and engaging with other EU human rights concerns. "}],[{"start":200.06,"text":"Brussels secured commitments from China in these areas as part of the deal, but critics have argued that they do not go far enough. "}],[{"start":208.92000000000002,"text":"Iuliu Winkler, lead MEP on China for the parliament’s trade committee, told the Financial Times that China’s decision to retaliate in the sanctions dispute amounted to “a regrettable escalation”. "}],[{"start":221.45000000000002,"text":"“What I hope is that diplomacy will find a way of de-escalating,” he said. "},{"start":226.442,"text":"“We need to build some trust, for the moment there is none between the parties. ”"}],[{"start":231.87,"text":"China announced the sanctions on Monday as retaliation against travel bans and asset freezes imposed on four Chinese officials and a security organisation because of persecution and mass internments of Uyghurs in the Xinjiang region. "},{"start":246.774,"text":"The moves were a co-ordinated step by the EU, US, Canada and UK, prompting a furious response from the Chinese government. "},{"start":255.567,"text":"China’s foreign ministry announced on Tuesday that it had summoned the UK ambassador and the EU delegation representative the previous night to admonish them over the sanctions. "},{"start":266.234,"text":"“When it comes to human rights, the EU has no qualification to take the mantle of a master who arrogantly lectures others,” deputy foreign minister Qin Gang told EU ambassador Nicolas Chapuis, warning that the sanctions would further damage EU-China relations. "}],[{"start":283.42,"text":"The Chinese retaliatory sanctions hit outspoken critics in the parliament of Beijing’s human-rights violations, including five MEPs — among them Reinhard Bütikofer, chair of the assembly’s delegation to China, and Raphaël Glucksmann, chair of a special committee on “Foreign Interference in all Democratic Processes”. "},{"start":303.649,"text":"The measures ban them from entering China or “doing business” with it. "},{"start":307.629,"text":"The parliament’s human rights committee was also targeted. "}],[{"start":312.22,"text":"Winkler and other MEPs insist that there is time to salvage the situation before the real ratification process for the agreement gets under way — a step that is unlikely until late this year given the need to translate the agreement into all of the EU’s 24 official languages. "},{"start":329.312,"text":"But that would require China to lift sanctions and pivot to constructively addressing EU concerns. "}],[{"start":336.51000000000005,"text":"Inma Rodríguez-Piñero, lead MEP on China trade issues for the parliament’s large centre-left bloc, told the FT that “there is time enough in order to redirect the situation”. "}],[{"start":348.99000000000007,"text":"“I don’t believe either China or the EU wants this escalated situation,” she said, adding that “now is time to wait,” for diplomacy to run its course. "}],[{"start":359.05000000000007,"text":"On paper, the benefits for China of the investment deal are largely confined to limited and reciprocal access to the EU market for renewable energy. "}],[{"start":369.4600000000001,"text":"But EU diplomats have noted that the real attraction for Beijing was the political upside: the deal offers the potential for an improved relationship with the EU at a time when the US is seeking to put co-ordinated pressure on China, and when Brussels is readying new methods of retaliation against unfair or exploitative trading practices. "}],[{"start":390.6300000000001,"text":"“In the short term, China's biggest consideration is to let Europe remain neutral in the US-China dispute, so the CAI is more like a carrot that China has offered. "},{"start":401.0840000000001,"text":"Between China and Europe, it's easier for Europe to let go of the CAI,” said Bo Zhuang, chief China economist at TS Lombard in Beijing. "}],[{"start":410.9400000000001,"text":"Despite the incentives for both sides to push the deal through, EU politicians acknowledge that its fate hangs in the balance. "},{"start":418.8570000000001,"text":"“CAI is not on the table now,” said Winkler of the ratification process. "},{"start":423.6490000000001,"text":"“There is a long road leading there — along that path China has to respond to the expectations of the European Parliament”. "}],[{"start":430.72000000000014,"text":""}]],"url":"https://creatives.ftacademy.cn/album/001091910-1616588512.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

生物计算机是如何“培育”的

澳大利亚初创公司Cortical Labs与英国的bit.bio共同打造了CL1,旨在创造“合成生物智能”。

工作中遇到问题?我的聊天机器人会给你发消息

大量由人工智能生成的投诉,意味着人力资源和客户服务部门将面临一种新的无端麻烦。

如何让孩子们重新开始阅读

如今,出于兴趣而阅读的年轻人比以往任何时候都少,这一趋势带来了广泛的经济和社会影响。我们能否扭转这一局面?

市值100亿美元的英国能源挑战者普拉克斯集团如何走向瓦解

林赛炼油厂所有者的倒闭是一个警示故事,说明一家缺乏足够财力来管理其庞大业务的公司所面临的风险。

与特朗普通话后俄罗斯对乌克兰发动创纪录空袭

美国停止交付关键拦截器后,克里姆林宫派出500多架伊朗设计的无人机。

印度证监会暂时禁止Jane Street交易证券

该监管机构指责这家总部位于纽约的交易公司实施了操纵衍生品市场的“险恶计划”。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×