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Canada Seeks to Join EU Challenge to China at WTO

Canada said it opposed ‘economic coercion’ and would stand with ‘like-minded partners in supporting rules-based international trade’ at the WTO.


the lobby of the Taiwanese Representative Office with flowers in Lithuania, Vilnius. Taipei announced on November 18 ,2021 it had formally opened a de facto embassy in Lithuania using the name Taiwan, a significant diplomatic departure that defied a pressure campaign by Beijing. PETRAS MALUKAS / AFP
The lobby of the Taiwan representative office in Vilnius. China has said the dispute was political rather than economic and labelled Lithuania's actions as an attempt to "hijack" EU-Beijing relations. It regards the self-governed island of Taiwan as its own territory. Photo: AFP.

 

Canada will seek to join the UK, US and Australia in consultations on the European Union’s dispute with China at the World Trade Organization over Beijing’s alleged trade curbs on Lithuania.

“Canada is concerned by China’s recent trade actions taken against Lithuania and European Union goods and services with Lithuanian content,” Global Affairs Canada – the country’s foreign ministry – said in a statement on Thursday.

China’s moves “could undermine the rules-based international trading system and its institutions”, it added.

The EU launched a challenge at the Geneva-based trade body in January, accusing China of discriminatory trade practices against Lithuania that it says threaten the integrity of the EU’s single market.

China has downgraded diplomatic ties with Lithuania and pressured multinational companies to sever links with the Baltic nation of 2.8 million people after it allowed Taiwan to open a de facto embassy in Vilnius.

Canada said it opposed “economic coercion” and stood with “like-minded partners in supporting rules-based international trade” with the WTO.

China, which has said the dispute was political rather than economic and labelled Lithuania’s actions an attempt to “hijack” EU-Beijing relations, regards the self-governed island of Taiwan as its own territory.

The challenge at the WTO allows 60 days for the parties to confer in order to reach a settlement. If none is reached, the EU may choose to launch a formal dispute that would set up a WTO panel to study its claims against China.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean OMeara

 

 

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.