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AEROSPACE
China welcomes French president with Airbus deal
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 25, 2013


China tells France it wants more balanced trade
Shanghai (AFP) April 26, 2013 - Chinese Premier Li Keqiang was quoted as telling French President Francois Hollande on Friday that Beijing wants more balanced trade with France and is willing to buy more French products.

Hollande was on the second day of a two-day visit to China aimed at rebalancing trade relations between the economic powers.

"China is not looking for a trade surplus but wants to import more French goods," Li said, according to a source close to the delegations.

Hollande said aboard a plane carrying him from Beijing to the commercial capital of Shanghai that he was satisfied with progress made in the talks.

"They responded perfectly to the requests that we made," he said.

The Chinese "do not want to be seen as a country that is seeking (trade) surpluses", Hollande said, adding that he earlier told Li: "I am not seeking deficits."

France accounts for just 1.3 percent of China's foreign trade compared with around five percent for Germany, and a trade deficit with China of 26 billion euros ($34 billion) last year is seen in Paris as unsustainable.

On Thursday, the first day of Hollande's visit, the two sides announced a lucrative deal for 60 Airbus planes as Hollande became the first Western leader to meet in Beijing with President Xi Jinping.

The deal, signed in the presence of Hollande and Xi, was part of the French leader's attempt to press China to help reduce its trade surplus with France.

China's pact with Airbus could be worth at least $7.7 billion at list prices, although customers generally negotiate discounts from plane manufacturers.

The French president later vowed to remove obstacles to Chinese investment in France as he vies to drum up anaemic rates of growth in the eurozone's number-two economy.

Hollande told a press conference Thursday that during his talks with Chinese leaders he also raised the issue of Tibet and human rights, with all topics discussed in a "frank and respectful manner".

He said such discussions were not the only purpose of his trip, and that they wanted to talk about political partnership, the Chinese presence in Europe and economic growth.

On Friday, Hollande highlighted the importance of cooperation between the two countries on a range of issues.

"The world needs China and France to deepen regulations, strengthen certain procedures, govern the planet better and to resolve certain conflicts or stave off threats," Hollande told Li.

"We are, like China, aware that we must fight against global warming."

The French president will head home from Shanghai late Friday.

China welcomed French President Francois Hollande on Thursday with a deal potentially worth billions for 60 Airbus planes as he became the first Western leader to pay court to Beijing's new supremo.

Hollande came to China accompanied by a planeload of business executives, earning a brief respite from economic woes at home and the aftermath of a corruption scandal that has forced his budget minister to resign.

He was the first Western leader to be received in Beijing by China's new president, Xi Jinping, who accorded military honours to his fellow head of state on an inspection of People's Liberation Army personnel in Tiananmen Square.

In the Great Hall of the People adjoining the square, the leaders attended a signing ceremony for an outline agreement on the Airbus deal as Hollande pressed Xi to help rebalance China's trade surplus over France.

France accounts for just 1.3 percent of China's foreign trade compared with around five percent for Germany, and a trade deficit with China of 26 billion euros ($34 billion) last year is seen in Paris as unsustainable.

"Today there is a trade imbalance and it behoves us to fix it, not to reduce our investments and our exports but to increase them," Hollande said while exchanging greetings with Xi in front of reporters.

The French president later vowed to remove obstacles to Chinese investment in France as he vies to drum up anaemic rates of growth in the eurozone's number-two economy.

"We are ready to welcome more Chinese investment in France," he said, insisting that protectionism was not the answer to redressing the trade deficit.

Xi told Hollande that he welcomed efforts to facilitate investment by Chinese firms in France, which lags far behind the same investment in Germany.

"I look forward to the future of our global strategic partnership and look forward to working with you to make our bilateral relationship closer, healthier and more vibrant," the Communist Party chief said.

Hollande later told a press conference that during his talks with Chinese leaders he also raised the issue of Tibet and human rights, with all topics discussed in a "frank and respectful manner".

He said such discussions were not the only purpose of his trip, and that they wanted to talk about political partnership, the Chinese presence in Europe and economic growth.

But Emmanouil Athanasiou of the International Committee for Liu Xiaobo, the jailed Nobel Peace Prize winner, accused Hollande of "sacrificing" human rights for economic interests.

The aircraft agreement was signed by Airbus and a state-controlled holding company that imports planes into China. It includes a new order for 42 medium-range A320 aircraft, Airbus said.

The rest of the agreement concerns 18 of 45 orders for long-haul A330 aircraft that were frozen last year by Beijing in response to the European Union's plans to impose an airline carbon tax.

All airlines including Chinese carriers were supposed to begin receiving bills for the scheme at the start of this year but in March the EU deferred the plan until April 2014.

China's pact with Airbus could be worth at least $7.7 billion at list prices, although customers generally negotiate discounts from plane manufacturers.

A significant portion of the planes will be manufactured in China at an Airbus factory in Tianjin, 150 kilometres (95 miles) from the capital, an industry source told AFP on condition on anonymity.

France also secured progress on another cornerstone of its industrial prowess, nuclear energy, with China signing a letter of intent on the construction of a nuclear waste treatment facility by the Areva company.

Carmaker Renault meanwhile hopes to advance negotiations on a proposed factory at Wuhan in central China that would produce 150,000 vehicles per year.

Hollande was due to have three meetings with Xi, including a state banquet on Thursday.

The two men will have a more intimate lunch on Friday along with their glamorous partners, Hollande's girlfriend Valerie Trierweiler and Xi's wife Peng Liyuan.

The French president will then travel to China's commercial hub of Shanghai before heading home late Friday.

Hollande 'sacrificing' rights on China visit: NGO
Paris (AFP) April 25, 2013 - A group supporting jailed Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo on Thursday accused French President Francois Hollande of putting economic interests before human rights during his visit to China.

"Human rights are being sacrificed for economic interests. European heads of state are going to China for money, not to promote the human rights of the Chinese people," said Emmanouil Athanasiou, the coordinator for the International Committee for Liu Xiaobo.

Liu, a dissident writer, was jailed for 11 years in 2009 for "subversion" after circulating a charter calling for democratic reforms, and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010 to Beijing's fury.

Hollande on Thursday became the first Western leader to be received in Beijing by China's new president, Xi Jinping, arriving in the country with a planeload of business executives.

Hollande told a press conference Thursday that he had raised human rights issues in China in a "frank and respectful manner" and cited a list of Chinese dissidents established by the European Union.

He did not, however, mention Liu personally.

"How can you call for his release if you don't even dare say his name in public!" said Athanasiou. "China needs Europe as much as Europe needs China. Europe must bring to China the universal values it is lacking."

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