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British Prime Minister Tony Blair is expected to take on the Korean Peninsula nuclear standoff, the post-war reconstruction of Iraq and the India-Pakistan issue when he meets Chinese leaders, according to the Chinese foreign ministry.

"Britain hopes to enhance co-ordination with China on a number of regional and international current topics," said Zhao Jun, director of the ministry's Department of Western European Affairs.

Blair arrived in Beijing last night, kicking off his three-day official visit to China. He is the second Western European state leader, following French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, to meet the new Chinese leadership in China.

Today, he is going to meet Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, President Hu Jintao and Central Military Commission Chairman Jiang Zemin.

Britain is one of the few Western countries with an embassy in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), and Blair discussed the nuclear issue when he visited Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) after a stop in Washington.

Being two permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, China and Britain share common interests and responsibilities in a variety of international affairs, said Professor Zhao Huaipu of the Beijing-based Foreign Affairs College.

"Both (China and Britain) hope to see stability on the Korean Peninsula, and in Iraq and South Asia at an early date," Zhao Huaipu said.

Blair will also talk about promoting trade ties with China, which has so far not figured very prominently on the prime minister's agenda.

There will be an exploration of the potential for economic co-operation between the two nations, said Zhao Huaipu.

The bilateral trade volume was US$11.4 billion last year, and had reached US$5 billion by May 2003, an increase of 16.3 per cent over the previous year. By the end of 2002, the UK had invested in 3,406 projects in China, with US$10.7 billion actually put into use, ranking the UK the largest investor among European Union members in China.

"I believe that Chinese leaders and Blair will discuss new philosophies and measures to boost bilateral co-operation in various fields," said Zhao Jun.

Blair is taking a number of British business leaders with him to China - including executives from the pharmaceutical firm GlaxoSmithKline, auto giants Rolls-Royce and oil companies Shell and BP.

They will attend a forum with Chinese entrepreneurs in Shanghai, and Blair is due to make a speech on globalization to the British Chamber of Commerce in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

"The smooth transfer of government in Hong Kong between China and the United Kingdom in July 1997 opened a new chapter in the annals of Sino-British relations," said Zhao Jun.

"Blair has clearly expressed his hope that Hong Kong would act as a 'bridge' for bilateral relations rather than a barrier." (See Page 4)

(China Daily 07/21/2003 page1)

     

 
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