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Australia, China agree to fast-track free trade deal: PM Rudd

by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Nov 17, 2008
Australia and China have agreed to speed up work on a free trade agreement following discussions on the global financial crisis, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said.

Rudd, who met China's President Hu Jintao in Washington following G20 talks on tackling the financial meltdown, said no deadline for an agreement had yet been set.

"We've agreed to adopt a fresh approach to speeding up the conclusion of this agreement even more," he told reporters in Washington on Sunday.

"I can't put a specific timeline on that, but we will be reviewing progress again when next we meet."

Rudd, due to meet Hu at the upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Peru, said he wanted to negotiate "a balanced agreement which suits the long-term economic interest of both economies."

"This is really important for us and for the Chinese long term," he said.

"China has great interest in the Australian market in terms of long-term access to energy and raw materials. We have great interest to (having) greater access to China's market in goods and in services."

Australia and China began talks on a free trade agreement in May 2005 but discussions had stalled until April this year when Rudd used a visit to Beijing to push for progress on the deal with the nation's largest trading partner.

The prime minister said the talks had moved forward since then and he was "confident that we can get real progress in the period ahead."

Rudd said it was important for governments to work together during the current financial upheaval, which is expected to bring job losses and lower economic growth in Australia and has raised questions about China's growth.

"The Chinese, like the Australian government, is very mindful of the impact of the global financial crisis over the last couple of months, and into next year as well," he said.

"We agreed this will be a tough time for all of us, but it therefore means it's an important time for governments like China and Australia to work very closely together. And we intend to do that."

China's Hu also pointed to the global challenges, saying they presented Beijing and Canberra with unprecedented opportunities for deepening bilateral cooperation, the Xinhua news agency reported.

Hu said trade with Australia was growing rapidly and negotiations on the free trade agreement were making steady progress, Xinhu said.

earlier related report
China leader to launch free trade talks in Costa Rica
China and Costa Rica were to launch free trade talks here Monday in a historic visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao at the start of a Latin America tour including Cuba and Peru.

China has increased diplomacy and investment in the region in recent years, with an eye on natural resources and developing markets for manufactured goods and even arms.

The Costa Rican capital, normally heaving with traffic, was partially closed for the highest-level visit by a Chinese official to the country, just over a year after it gave up six decades of ties with Taiwan.

Hu, who arrived with scores of businessmen and Communist Party officials on Sunday, was due to announce the start of talks for a joint, free trade accord with Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Monday morning.

They were also due to sign 11 cooperation deals, from building a joint oil refinery to setting up a Chinese language institute.

"The free trade agreement is very important for China, considering the strategic importance of Costa Rica for both the Caribbean and Central America," said Wang Xiaoyuan, the Chinese ambassador here.

Costa Rica, a major exporter of computer components, has dismissed fears of an invasion of Chinese products into the country of some four million under the free trade deal, which could be signed in 2010, diplomats said.

The trade balance has favored Costa Rica up until now, with 803 million dollars of exports up to September this year, compared with 671 million dollars of Chinese imports. China, however, deals in a much more diverse range of products.

Costa Rica would be the third Latin American country to negotiate a free trade deal with China, after Chile and Peru, which has not yet concluded its accord.

Costa Rica broke off more than 60 years of relations with Taiwan when it became the first Central American country to begin diplomatic ties with China on June 1, 2007.

Both Taiwan -- a democratic self-ruled island that Beijing considers part of its territory awaiting reunification -- and China have been accused of using so-called "dollar diplomacy" to get nations to ally with them.

But Taiwan has seen its allies fall over the years.

Part of China's incentives for Costa Rica's recognition came from its enormous foreign exchange reserves with an offer to buy 300 million dollars in bonds. It also donated 73 million dollars to build a new national stadium.

Hu was to travel to Cuba late Monday, before attending an Asia-Pacific summit in Peru on November 22.

The Chinese leader was to promote Communist and economic ties on his second visit to the communist island, days before the arrival of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

China offered key support to former Cuban leader Fidel Castro when Cuba fell into dire economic straits after the 1991 breakup of the former Soviet Union, forging a divide with Russia.

China was Cuba's second business partner, after Venezuela, in 2007.

Current deals include Chinese oil prospection and extraction on and off Cuba and two Cuban eye hospitals in China and a third under construction.

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