Justin Trudeau at APEC calls on middle powers to step up
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called for middle and smaller
nations to step up where the US has stepped back to shore up multilateral
institutions and ensure that China “plays by the rules”, in a powerful address
to the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit.
Mr Trudeau used his speech on Friday to the Malaysia-hosted digital
meeting to warn the era of “Pax Americana” was over — notwithstanding an
anticipated shift back to multilateralism under president-elect Joe Biden — and
smaller nations needed to pull together to show leadership on issues from
global trade to coercive Chinese diplomacy.
“It’s time for smaller countries to realise we all have a weight and
ability to shape global leadership in meaningful ways for our citizens and
neighbours,” Mr Trudeau told the APEC summit in a 45-minute online address that
included a question-and-answer session.
“In the face of pressure and increasingly coercive moves by one of the
world’s great powers, it really highlights we need to be working together as
allies, as neighbours, as friends, as countries.
“Very few countries can stand up on (their) own to a great power but
working together in alignment we can make sure there is a recognition that the
path China is choosing to take right now probably is not going to be as
effective as they think it will.
“All of us trying to work together to say: ‘No, we just want the rules to
be respected, we want people to respect the rule of law, we want not to see
political decisions impact the safety of our citizens or the smooth flow of
trade.’ Obviously the more countries pull together the more impactful we will
be.”
Mr Trudeau’s address to the 21-nation bloc comes as Canada and Australia —
two of the world’s middle powers — face rising diplomatic and trade pressure
from Beijing over their push-back against Chinese coercion.
On Thursday President Xi Jinping used his APEC address to underline
China’s commitment to opening up its economy, pointing to Beijing’s
participation in the 15-nation Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
agreement signed last week. “We will not reverse course or run against the
historical trend by decoupling, or forming a small circle to keep others out,”
Mr Xi said, in a swipe at US protectionism under Donald Trump.
“Openness enables a country to move forward, while seclusion holds it
back.”
He also urged all countries to “act in the spirit of partnership, step up
policy communication and co-ordination, intensify all-round global co-operation
against COVID-19 and keep the global economy open".
White House officials have said Mr Trump would attend the Friday night
leaders’ summit — one of few public engagements since his election defeat — and
address fellow APEC leaders in a speech likely to highlight China’s role in the
pandemic and its “bullying” of smaller Indo-Pacific nations.
It will be only the second time that Mr Trump has participated in APEC,
the other occasion being in 2017.
US relations with China have deteriorated badly amid their escalating
trade war.
So has Canada’s since the 2018 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, Huawei’s chief
financial officer and daughter of the Chinese telecom giant’s founder Ren
Zhengfei, following a US extradition request on charges the company violated
American sanctions on Iran.
China quickly retaliated by arresting two Canadian citizens, former
diplomat Michael Kovrig and tour operator Michael Spavor, who have been held in
solitary confinement for 18 months and are being tried for espionage.
Mr Trudeau said the world needed to call out human rights abuses by
Beijing, “whether it’s concerns with behaviour in Hong Kong or the situation
with the (Muslim) Uighurs”, as many as a million of whom are being held in mass
incarceration in Xinjiang province.