Representatives of the British government participated in a capacity building workshop in AI hosted in China in Beijing this week, Zheng said. And he underlined the delegation that China sent to the conservative summit of Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in 2023 as proof of how the two countries are already collaborating on emerging technology.
But if London and Beijing must go further on the question of the hot button, it is “very important to get rid of disturbances and political interventions,” said ambassador Zheng. “Some in the United Kingdom still see China through an obsolete lens. They keep their ideological biases and go beyond the concept of national security. ”
China and Great Britain, he said, should also work together to “face” the challenges posed by “commercial intimidation” and the pricing war of US President Donald Trump.
The beginning of this week saw Beijing and Washington alleviate economic tensions after Trump slapped 145% of prices on imports of Chinese products last month, China responding in kind.
The two parties announced on Monday that they would reduce the prices. The Trump administration reduced theirs to 30%, while the Chinese party increased from 125%to 10%, for 90 days to allow new negotiations.
This week, Ambassador Zheng criticized the Starmer’s commercial pact with Trump struck a week ago, arguing that he could force Chinese companies from the British supply chains. Nations like Great Britain should “say no to any arrangement that hinders international exchanges and collaboration,” the Chinese ambassador said on Wednesday.
“We have to maintain real multilateralism. We must firmly oppose the decoupling or separation of the global industrial supply chain or these small courtyard practices,” said Zheng.
“International cooperation in science-techniques is faced with unprecedented challenges,” the Beijing ambassador said in London. Regarding AI and other problems, the two nations should “continue to collaborate closely”.
Politices